Omid Mazandarani, Mojtaba Rajabi, Shima Soleymani Garmroodi
Coming to its own in the 1960s with the advent of the “language laboratory”, to many, the notion of technology-enhanced (language) education is no longer a rocket science. As such, only in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic, did technology begin to gain a surge of interest it deserved in language education environments, where a paradigm shift in the mode of instructional delivery, from traditional face-to-face to remote online education, came to existence. It now transpires that technology tends to serve as the sine qua none of the post-pandemic language education context, where the integration of technology into language teaching and learning environments is no longer merely an emergency response but rather a broader pursuit of pedagogical efficacy. More recently, Artificial Intelligence (AI) has made inroads into mainstream education, including the language education enterprise, allowing for AI-driven enhanced teaching and learning. Despite ample research, little do we know about how AI transcends its role as a key driver of quality education. As a prime example, ChatGPT, an AI tool, is underexplored in second/foreign language (L2) education contexts (Derakhshan & Ghiasvand, 2024). In such a milieu, any endeavour to bring to the fore the potentials and concerns surrounding technology-empowered language education is highly valued.