The Role Of Digital Tools In Shaping Psychological Factors Of EFL Learners
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.37547/pedagogics-crjp-07-01-26Keywords:
EFL, digital tools, foreign language anxietyAbstract
Digital tools have become central to English-as-a-Foreign-Language (EFL) learning in both formal classrooms and informal environments. Alongside gains in access and flexibility, technology reshapes learners’ psychological experiences—motivation, anxiety, enjoyment, self-efficacy, engagement, and emotion regulation—through the way it structures interaction, feedback, autonomy, and social presence. This article synthesizes contemporary evidence and theory to explain how major categories of digital tools (mobile-assisted learning, computer-assisted learning, learning analytics feedback, virtual reality, AI chatbots, and informal digital learning ecosystems) influence psychological factors that are known to predict persistence and performance. Using an integrative literature review and conceptual synthesis, the paper identifies dual mechanisms: digital environments may reduce anxiety and enhance self-efficacy by providing psychological safety, personalization, and timely feedback, yet they can also intensify anxiety through cognitive overload, public visibility of performance, and reduced human connection. Evidence from recent EFL studies suggests that well-designed technology use tends to increase motivation and enjoyment, while poorly aligned tool-task designs can trigger avoidance, technostress, and fluctuating participation. The article concludes with design implications for EFL pedagogy: psychological outcomes depend less on the tool itself and more on the learning ecology created around it—feedback practices, interaction norms, transparency of expectations, and teacher mediation.
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