Autonomy, Agency, and Anxiety: A Qualitative Survey Study of Moroccan EFL Teachers’ Perceptions of Inquiry-Based Learning

Authors

  • Rajaa Laghrissi PhD Candidate and a member of Language and Society Laboratory, Faculty of Languages, Letters, and Arts, Ibn Tofail University, Kenitra, Morocco https://orcid.org/0009-0003-7090-3344
  • Ahmed Smirkou Associate professor at FLLA, Ibn Tofail University in Kenitra, Morocco

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.32996/jeltal.2026.8.6.2

Keywords:

Inquiry-Based Learning, English as a Foreign Language, Moroccan schools, teachers’ perceptions, Triple A framework: Autonomy, Agency, and Anxiety, thematic analysis, learner-centered pedagogy, educational reform.

Abstract

Inquiry-Based Learning (IBL) is becoming a key focus in global and Moroccan education policies as a crucial approach to promote critical thinking and autonomy. Despite the Moroccan curricular guidelines' endorsement of inquiry-based pedagogies to trigger a shift in educational paradigms towards student-centeredness, the enactment of IBL is often tempered by systemic and psychological pressures. The present qualitative inquiry explores Moroccan EFL teachers' perspectives on the benefits, classroom practices, and difficulties of IBL through a qualitative survey, distributed to teachers in public and private secondary schools. We undertook a thematic analysis using the "Triple A" (Autonomy, Agency, and Anxiety) framework. The results show a strong pedagogical embrace of IBL, with 61.1% of respondents citing enhanced ownership and motivation as its main affordance, paralleling national studies that highlight IBL's value in cultivating 21st-century skills. Yet, findings reveal a persistent "rhetoric-reality gap", with teachers using agency to transform IBL into "problem-solving tasks" to align with institutional demands. Barriers include curriculum load and time (58.3%), pedagogic anxiety about classroom management, and a "linguistic threshold" on the balance between accuracy and fluency. The research highlights the gap between reform goals and classroom practice, suggesting that the successful and enduring implementation of IBL in Morocco requires institutional backing, resource provisioning, and culturally sensitive professional development beyond the efforts of individual teachers.

Author Biography

  • Rajaa Laghrissi, PhD Candidate and a member of Language and Society Laboratory, Faculty of Languages, Letters, and Arts, Ibn Tofail University, Kenitra, Morocco

    Rajaa Laghrissi is a PhD candidate in Applied Linguistics at Ibn Tofail University, Morocco, and an English Language teacher with over 20 years of experience in the UAE. Her research interests include adaptive teaching, inquiry-based learning, EFL education, AI in education, speaking skills, and academic writing.

     

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Published

2026-05-22

Issue

Section

Research Article

How to Cite

Laghrissi, R., & Smirkou, A. (2026). Autonomy, Agency, and Anxiety: A Qualitative Survey Study of Moroccan EFL Teachers’ Perceptions of Inquiry-Based Learning. Journal of English Language Teaching and Applied Linguistics , 8(6), 16-28. https://doi.org/10.32996/jeltal.2026.8.6.2