Exploring language teacher educators' agency enactment for wellbeing


Sak M.

4th International Conference on Psychology for Language Teachers and Learners , İstanbul, Türkiye, 17 - 18 Ekim 2025, ss.16, (Özet Bildiri)

  • Yayın Türü: Bildiri / Özet Bildiri
  • Basıldığı Şehir: İstanbul
  • Basıldığı Ülke: Türkiye
  • Sayfa Sayıları: ss.16
  • TED Üniversitesi Adresli: Evet

Özet

The capacity to exercise agency forms a core part of language teacher educators’ (LTEs) expertise, as it plays a

transformative role in supporting their continuous learning and enabling them to navigate contextual obstacles.

However, scholarship examining the ways in which agency informs LTEs’ professional practices is relatively

scarce. With this in mind and given that the exercise of agency is instrumental in shaping one’s wellbeing

trajectories, this qualitative study draws on data from a larger PhD project to explore university-based English-

as-a-foreign-language (EFL) teacher educators’ exercise of agency in promoting and sustaining their wellbeing in

the face of challenges. Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis of interview data from 8 participants revealed

that challenges and critical incidents faced served as triggers that made the participants realize the need to attend

to their wellbeing. This heightened awareness, in turn, led to strong agentic efforts for self-care across personal

and professional domains through engagement in personal interests and hobbies, reliance on meaningful social

connections, attempts to maintain a healthy work-life balance, and deployment of various emotion regulation

strategies. There were also reports of engaging in community building, introducing changes to course design, and

embracing a resolution-seeking attitude in the workplace as forms of self-care. Overall, these findings not only

advance our limited knowledge of the coping mechanisms utilized by LTEs in their situated communities but also

bring evidence for the crucial role of agency in making LTEs better equipped in promoting and sustaining their

wellbeing over time. The insights gained also suggest implications for institutions on ways to support and facilitate

LTEs’ self-care practices.