“…Given its growing attention, the construct of well-being has been theorized, research, and operationalized in varied and often conflicting ways through various theoretical frameworks (Mercer, 2021). Research informed by positive psychology, for instance, has contributed valuable and practical understandings of the efficacy of formal language education in supporting learners' happiness and well-being, such as through service to others in the language (Bouvet et al, 2017), the inclusion of music in the curriculum (Gregersen, 2016), and communal physical activity, among many other practices (Oxford, 2016). Yet despite its practicality and accessibility for language educators, the positive psychology conceptualization of well-being in language learning comprises a wide-and often inconsistent-spectrum of elements (e.g., life meaningfulness, flow, positive emotions, happiness; MacIntyre et al, 2019) reflecting an incomplete and more subjective, rather than eudaimonic, understanding of wellbeing.…”