Project-Based Learning in Moroccan Middle Schools: English Teachers’ Perceptions of Opportunities, Practices, and Challenges

Authors

  • Ali Bekou EFL teacher at Ministry of National Education and Adjunct professor at ESEF, Ibn Tofail Kenitra, Morocco https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0619-9156
  • Hamza Belbaraka Belbaraka Hamza, EFL teacher at the Ministry of National Education and a doctoral student at FLLA, Ibn Tofail University, Kenitra, Morocco https://orcid.org/0009-0006-4393-2977
  • Khadija Anass Full professor at FLLA, Ibn Tofail University in Kenitra, Morocco

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.32996/jeltal.2026.8.1.1

Keywords:

Project-Based Learning, English as a foreign language (EFL), Moroccan middle schools , teachers’ perceptions , phenomenology, thematic analysis, learner-centered pedagogy

Abstract

Project-Based Learning (PBL) is being increasingly promoted across global and Moroccan educational reforms as a means of fostering meaningful, student-centered learning. Although Moroccan curricular guidelines advocate project work as a vehicle for autonomy and critical thinking, research indicates that its implementation remains inconsistent and often misunderstood. This qualitative phenomenological study investigates the perceptions of fifteen English teachers in public middle schools in Salé in Morocco regarding the opportunities, classroom practices, and challenges associated with PBL and its implementation. Data from semi-structured interviews were analyzed thematically. Findings show that teachers perceive PBL as highly beneficial for engagement, communicative competence, and soft-skills development, echoing evidence from Moroccan studies demonstrating PBL’s positive impact on learners’ critical thinking and collaboration. However, teachers’ enactment of PBL is shaped by structural limitations, resulting in adapted, abbreviated forms of PBL similar to patterns previously noted in Moroccan classrooms. Challenges include curricular overload, overcrowded classes, resource scarcity, and insufficient training—constraints also emphasized in national research on project work. The study highlights the persistent gap between policy aspirations and school realities and argues that sustainable PBL integration in Morocco requires systemic reform beyond teacher initiative.

Author Biographies

  • Ali Bekou, EFL teacher at Ministry of National Education and Adjunct professor at ESEF, Ibn Tofail Kenitra, Morocco

    Ali Bekou is a PhD holder from Ibn Tofail University in Morocco and an adjunct professor at the same university (ESEF) and an EFL teacher at the Ministry of National Education. He has been teaching English to middle and high school students for almost 20 years now. He received a bachelor’s degree in linguistics in 2004 and a master’s degree in TEFL in 2019 from Ibn Tofail University. Bekou is interested in ELT, namely ICT, intercultural communicative competence, learners’ identities, culturally responsive pedagogy, and AI in education. He is also interested in educational research and research methodology

  • Hamza Belbaraka, Belbaraka Hamza, EFL teacher at the Ministry of National Education and a doctoral student at FLLA, Ibn Tofail University, Kenitra, Morocco

    Hamza Belbaraka is a PhD candidate at Ibn Tofail University (FLLA) and a secondary school EFL teacher. Beyond school walls, he has served as a dialogue facilitator with Soliya since 2019 and has chaired the Sahara International Model United Nations (SIMUN) for six editions. His interests center on teacher professional development, intercultural communication, and youth engagement.

  • Khadija Anass, Full professor at FLLA, Ibn Tofail University in Kenitra, Morocco

    Dr. Khadija Anasse is a full professor at Ibn Tofail University (FLLA). She is interested in linguistics, pedagogy, in-service training, and ELT methodology. 

Downloads

Published

2026-01-18

Issue

Section

Research Article

How to Cite

Bekou, A., Belbaraka, H., & Anass, K. (2026). Project-Based Learning in Moroccan Middle Schools: English Teachers’ Perceptions of Opportunities, Practices, and Challenges. Journal of English Language Teaching and Applied Linguistics , 8(1), 01-09. https://doi.org/10.32996/jeltal.2026.8.1.1