STATE BOREDOM IN ONLINE CLASSROOMS: A STUDY OF NOVICE AND EXPERIENCED IRANIAN EFL TEACHERS

Teachers and students frequently experience positive and negative emotions in EFL classrooms. Boredom is a negative feeling whose detrimental influence on various aspects of the learning process and achievement has been well established. However, in the EFL context, particularly among EFL teachers,...

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Main Authors: Masoomeh Estaji, Seyedeh Azadeh Sadr
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association for the Teaching of English as a Foreign Language in Indonesia (TEFLIN) 2024-12-01
Series:TEFLIN Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.teflin.org/index.php/journal/article/view/2850
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author Masoomeh Estaji
Seyedeh Azadeh Sadr
author_facet Masoomeh Estaji
Seyedeh Azadeh Sadr
author_sort Masoomeh Estaji
collection DOAJ
description Teachers and students frequently experience positive and negative emotions in EFL classrooms. Boredom is a negative feeling whose detrimental influence on various aspects of the learning process and achievement has been well established. However, in the EFL context, particularly among EFL teachers, this aspect remains under-examined. Using a mixed-methods research design, the current study examined 263 Iranian novice and experienced EFL teachers with online teaching experience to compare their state boredom and perceptions of its signs. For qualitative analysis, 15 novice and 15 experienced teachers were selected from the respondents to review their open-ended questionnaire answers. Additionally, 16 teachers participated in a semi-structured interview. The results of Mann-Whitney U-test revealed a significant difference in state boredom between teacher groups, with novice teachers experiencing higher level of boredom in online classrooms. Qualitative analysis using MAXQDA showed differing perceptions of boredom between novice and experienced teachers in online settings. Novice teachers primarily viewed boredom as attention failure, while experienced teachers had a deeper understanding, including loss of motivation and enthusiasm. The results suggest that targeted support and training for novice teachers in online environments are critical approaches to enhance engagement and reduce boredom, fostering a more comprehensive understanding of motivational factors.
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publishDate 2024-12-01
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spelling doaj-art-6a71eba973fc4852abfcc43bf6639f4d2024-12-19T02:09:26ZengAssociation for the Teaching of English as a Foreign Language in Indonesia (TEFLIN)TEFLIN Journal0215-773X2356-26412024-12-0135210.15639/teflinjournal.v35i2/248-271STATE BOREDOM IN ONLINE CLASSROOMS: A STUDY OF NOVICE AND EXPERIENCED IRANIAN EFL TEACHERSMasoomeh Estaji0Seyedeh Azadeh Sadr1Allameh Tabataba’i UniversityAllameh Tabataba’i UniversityTeachers and students frequently experience positive and negative emotions in EFL classrooms. Boredom is a negative feeling whose detrimental influence on various aspects of the learning process and achievement has been well established. However, in the EFL context, particularly among EFL teachers, this aspect remains under-examined. Using a mixed-methods research design, the current study examined 263 Iranian novice and experienced EFL teachers with online teaching experience to compare their state boredom and perceptions of its signs. For qualitative analysis, 15 novice and 15 experienced teachers were selected from the respondents to review their open-ended questionnaire answers. Additionally, 16 teachers participated in a semi-structured interview. The results of Mann-Whitney U-test revealed a significant difference in state boredom between teacher groups, with novice teachers experiencing higher level of boredom in online classrooms. Qualitative analysis using MAXQDA showed differing perceptions of boredom between novice and experienced teachers in online settings. Novice teachers primarily viewed boredom as attention failure, while experienced teachers had a deeper understanding, including loss of motivation and enthusiasm. The results suggest that targeted support and training for novice teachers in online environments are critical approaches to enhance engagement and reduce boredom, fostering a more comprehensive understanding of motivational factors.https://journal.teflin.org/index.php/journal/article/view/2850EFL contextexperienced teachersnovice teachersonline classroomstate boredom
spellingShingle Masoomeh Estaji
Seyedeh Azadeh Sadr
STATE BOREDOM IN ONLINE CLASSROOMS: A STUDY OF NOVICE AND EXPERIENCED IRANIAN EFL TEACHERS
TEFLIN Journal
EFL context
experienced teachers
novice teachers
online classroom
state boredom
title STATE BOREDOM IN ONLINE CLASSROOMS: A STUDY OF NOVICE AND EXPERIENCED IRANIAN EFL TEACHERS
title_full STATE BOREDOM IN ONLINE CLASSROOMS: A STUDY OF NOVICE AND EXPERIENCED IRANIAN EFL TEACHERS
title_fullStr STATE BOREDOM IN ONLINE CLASSROOMS: A STUDY OF NOVICE AND EXPERIENCED IRANIAN EFL TEACHERS
title_full_unstemmed STATE BOREDOM IN ONLINE CLASSROOMS: A STUDY OF NOVICE AND EXPERIENCED IRANIAN EFL TEACHERS
title_short STATE BOREDOM IN ONLINE CLASSROOMS: A STUDY OF NOVICE AND EXPERIENCED IRANIAN EFL TEACHERS
title_sort state boredom in online classrooms a study of novice and experienced iranian efl teachers
topic EFL context
experienced teachers
novice teachers
online classroom
state boredom
url https://journal.teflin.org/index.php/journal/article/view/2850
work_keys_str_mv AT masoomehestaji stateboredominonlineclassroomsastudyofnoviceandexperiencediranianeflteachers
AT seyedehazadehsadr stateboredominonlineclassroomsastudyofnoviceandexperiencediranianeflteachers