Cultural and Social Psychology

English Language Teachers’ Psychological Responses to AI Integration: A Grounded Theory Approach

Artificial Intelligence (AI) Psychological Challenges English Language Teachers AI Integration in Education

Authors

  • Marzie Hashemi
    m.hashemi2@khatam.ac.ir
    Department of Psychology and Educational Sciences, Faculty of Humanities, Khatam University, Tehran, Iran.
  • Farzad Ebrahimi Department of English Language and Literature, Faculty of Literature and Foreign Languages,Allameh Tabataba’i University, Tehran, Iran.
  • Fateme Hashemi Department of of English Language and Literature, Faculty of Literature and Foreign Languages, Allameh Tabataba’i University, Tehran, Iran.
Vol. 13 No. 1 (2026): January
Qualitative Study(ies)

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Objective: This study explored English language teachers’ psychological responses to AI integration and the process through which initial negative emotions evolve with experience and strategic use of AI.

Methods and Materials: Using a qualitative grounded theory design, eight part-time English teachers from diverse institutions were recruited via convenience sampling. Data were collected through open-ended, in-depth interviews. Analysis followed Corbin and Strauss’s coding procedures (open, axial, and selective coding) with constant comparison to develop categories and a central explanatory account of teachers’ experiences.

Findings: The core category was “Negotiating professional identity in AI-infused classrooms.” Two dominant psychological strains—anxiety and fear—were identified. These emotions were primarily rooted in perceived job obsolescence, threats to professional credibility/identity, and uncertainty about teachers’ evolving roles. As participants gained hands-on experience, many reported a shift toward strategic engagement, describing improved instructional creativity, reduced workload in routine tasks, higher job satisfaction, and better well-being, while still emphasizing the irreplaceable human elements of teaching.

Conclusion: AI integration can trigger identity-related distress among ELT teachers, yet purposeful, supported use may transform early anxiety and fear into adaptive empowerment. Professional development should address both technical competence and psychological adjustment (e.g., identity-reframing and ethical guidance) to sustain a healthy balance between AI affordances and human-centered pedagogy.