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Home Science News Psychology & Psychiatry

Chinese Students’ English Success: Grit, Enjoyment, Discipline

December 1, 2025
in Psychology & Psychiatry
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In an era where English proficiency increasingly dictates academic and professional success worldwide, understanding the psychological and motivational factors influencing language acquisition has become paramount. A groundbreaking study by Jiang (2025) published in BMC Psychology pioneers this exploration by delving deep into the intricate dynamics of Chinese students’ English learning processes. This research unveils how self-efficacy, enjoyment, and second language (L2) grit interplay alongside disciplinary differences to shape performance outcomes, employing a sophisticated moderated mediation model to dissect these relationships.

The study’s core premise rests on the concept of self-efficacy — the belief in one’s capacity to execute behaviors necessary to produce specific performance attainments. In language learning, this manifests as confidence in one’s ability to comprehend, produce, and interact in English. Jiang’s research underscores that higher self-efficacy profoundly enhances learners’ perseverance and engagement, laying a robust foundation for improved linguistic competence. This aligns with Bandura’s social cognitive theory, positioning self-efficacy as a catalyst for motivated action and resilience in the face of linguistic challenges.

Complementing self-efficacy, the study highlights the critical role of enjoyment in language learning. Enjoyment transcends mere pleasure; it encompasses intrinsic motivation that fuels sustained engagement and curiosity. Jiang illustrates that students who derive genuine enjoyment from learning English exhibit elevated persistence levels, which bolster their linguistic grit — defined as passion and perseverance toward long-term language mastery. This finding nuances prior educational psychology research by quantitatively affirming enjoyment as not just a favorable emotional state but an active driver of language acquisition.

Jiang further investigates L2 grit, an emerging construct adapted from the broader psychological trait of grit popularized by Duckworth. L2 grit encapsulates an individual’s sustained effort and interest in mastering a second language despite obstacles. The study’s moderated mediation analysis reveals that grit mediates the effect of self-efficacy on performance — meaning that students with strong self-beliefs nurture greater grit, which in turn elevates their English learning outcomes. This mediation effect is moderated by disciplinary differences, showcasing a nuanced layer where the impact of grit varies contingent on the academic field.

The disciplinary lens adopted in the study is particularly innovative; Jiang compares students majoring in disciplines categorized broadly as humanities/social sciences versus those in natural sciences/engineering. The results demonstrate that disciplinary differences significantly influence how self-efficacy, enjoyment, and grit coalesce to affect performance. Humanities students, traditionally exposed to more language-centric curricula, tend to leverage higher enjoyment and self-efficacy levels, reflecting in better English proficiency scores. In contrast, STEM students exhibit a divergent psychological profile where grit assumes a more pronounced role in mediating performance, possibly due to differing pedagogical approaches and motivational structures.

Methodologically, Jiang adopts a moderated mediation model, a sophisticated statistical approach that disentangles direct, indirect, and conditional effects within a multilayered research design. This allows the study to parse out how specific variables influence outcomes through intermediary mechanisms and how these effects shift across contextual moderators such as academic discipline. Such an approach elevates the study beyond correlational observations, offering causal insights critical for tailored educational interventions.

Another compelling dimension of Jiang’s research is the differentiation between English language performance metrics across disciplinary cohorts. The findings indicate not only variations in average performance but also disparities in the predictors of success, underscoring the need for discipline-sensitive pedagogies. Educators could harness this knowledge to craft targeted strategies that bolster self-efficacy and enjoyment in STEM contexts, where grit might serve as a more pivotal determinant, contrasting with humanities where enjoyment already plays a substantial role.

Significantly, the study advocates integrating psychological constructs into language learning curricula and assessment frameworks. By institutionalizing measures of self-efficacy, enjoyment, and grit, educational systems can move beyond traditional cognitive assessments to embrace a holistic view of learner development. This perspective advocates for affective and motivational scaffolding as integral to language mastery, potentially transforming English education practices both within China and globally.

Jiang’s findings carry implications extending beyond academic spheres, particularly into the growing international job market where English proficiency acts as a lingua franca. Organizations emphasizing employee development can draw on these insights to design training programs that amplify self-efficacy and intrinsic enjoyment, thereby enhancing workforce language competence. Moreover, fostering grit could be fostered through resilience-building workshops, aligning corporate language learning initiatives with psychological best practices.

In grappling with the complex tapestry of motivational and psychological factors in English learning, this study also raises pertinent questions for future research. One avenue is examining how cultural factors interact with the identified constructs, considering that learning environments and societal expectations vary widely. Another promising direction is longitudinal tracking to elucidate how these variables evolve over time and how interventions might sustain or enhance their positive effects.

Importantly, Jiang’s work resonates amid the evolving digital learning landscape. With online platforms becoming the primary conduit for many Chinese learners, understanding the emotional and motivational underpinnings of language acquisition gains urgency. Digital instructors and curriculum designers can leverage these findings to foster learner engagement through gamified modules that elevate enjoyment or adaptive feedback systems that reinforce self-efficacy and grit.

The intersection of self-efficacy, enjoyment, grit, and disciplinary influence revealed by this study underscores a paradigm shift in language education psychology: it’s not enough to merely measure ability; educators and researchers must holistically consider the learner’s psychological ecosystem. Jiang’s moderated mediation model offers a conceptual and empirical blueprint for such a shift, enabling nuanced appreciation and strategic targeting of the factors that truly propel English learning success among Chinese students.

In summary, Jiang’s 2025 study constitutes a landmark contribution to second language acquisition research by rigorously mapping how motivation, psychological resilience, and academic context dynamically interact to predict English learning outcomes. The integration of a moderated mediation framework underscores the complexity inherent in educational phenomena, moving scholarship beyond simplistic cause-effect models toward sophisticated, context-sensitive understandings. These advancements hold profound potential to inform education policy, instructional design, and the broader diaspora of language teaching and learning initiatives in an increasingly interconnected world.

As educational stakeholders continue grappling with the challenges of fostering effective and equitable English language learning, this research illuminates a hopeful path. By amplifying psychological supports like self-efficacy and enjoyment, cultivating grit, and respecting disciplinary distinctions, practitioners can more adeptly nurture learners equipped not only with linguistic skills but with the adaptive capacities to thrive in multifaceted academic and real-world environments. Jiang’s study is poised to catalyze a transformative wave in second language education research and practice, promising enriched learner experiences and enhanced performance on a global scale.


Subject of Research: Psychological and motivational factors affecting English language learning performance among Chinese students, with a focus on self-efficacy, enjoyment, grit, and disciplinary differences.

Article Title: Chinese students’ English learning self-efficacy, enjoyment, L2 grit, disciplinary difference, and performance: a moderated mediation model.

Article References:
Jiang, C. Chinese students’ English learning self-efficacy, enjoyment, L2 grit, disciplinary difference, and performance: a moderated mediation model. BMC Psychol 13, 1307 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1186/s40359-025-03616-w

Image Credits: AI Generated

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s40359-025-03616-w

Tags: academic success through English proficiencyBandura’s social cognitive theoryBMC Psychology researchChinese students English learningdiscipline in language studiesenjoyment in language educationgrit in second language learningmoderated mediation model in educationmotivational factors in language learningpsychological factors in language acquisitionresilience in language learningself-efficacy in language acquisition
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