Covid-19: An Impromptu or Trend-setting Factor in Research on Language and Education?

With the flood of research on Covid-19 in 2020 and 2021, pandemic-induced emergency is giving rise to new unprecedented challenges for all strata of the society, including science and education. The JLE editors focus on the first outcomes and hurdles the pandemic-caused research publishing has led to. The authors dwell upon the research on education in the context of Covid-19 constraints with a special accent on higher education and L2 teaching, considering the key trends as a response to the gaps in the field knowledge. Some attention is paid to emerging linguistic research and new word coinages to define the new phenomena. The editors summarize the obstacles that “fast-track” publishing and shortened peer review have built up, suggesting some estimates as of the Covid-19 effects of the research avalanche for science.

The leading source titles include SSRN Electronic Journal (558); medRxiv (440)  The search on "Covid-19 and education" in the Scopus database brought 20,173 publications (5; 6,845; 13,210; and 113 publications in 2019, 2020, 2021, and 2022 respectively) on December 3, 2021. The bulk of the articles were published in the fields of Medicine (9,969 publications), Social Sciences (6,796 publications), and Computer Sciences (2,364 publications). The journals, leading by the number of the publications on the Covid-19 impact on education, are Sustainability Switzerland, Education Sciences, and Academic Medicine.

Educational Landscape
Though the sector of education is beyond the matters of life and death, it was severely affected by disruptions and lockdowns. The emergency shift of the teaching and learning to the online platforms took enormous effort COVID-19: AN IMPROMPTU OR TREND-SETTING FACTOR IN RESEARCH ON LANGUAGE AND EDUCATION? of all the parties concerned (teachers, faculty, administration, and students). To alleviate the effects of the pandemic, universities had to comprehensively respond to the educational landscape formed in emergency, to address challenges ranging from the societal constraints to student disengagement with learning, and to fill up the skill gaps facilitating independent learning and remote teaching. The research focus in the field of education, thus, has been following the needs to fill up the gaps connected with online didactics competencies, psychological adaptation of students and occasionally teachers to the virtual classroom, new efficient forms of online assessment. Some fresh new topics have emerged (emergency remote teaching and learning; new approaches to online assessment; teacher engagement and emotion regulation in coping with stress caused by online teaching).
Semanticscholar.org ranges the most influential publications, outlining highly influential citations identified by "utilizing a machine-learning model analysing a number of factors including the number of citations to a publication, and the surrounding context for each". 3 The article scored most in this category (with the total citations of 652, including 55 highly influential citations as of November 30, 2021) is headlined "Covid-19 and online teaching in higher education: A case study of Peking University" (Bao, 2020). The article overviews six prevailing instructional strategies based on "high-impact principles of online education" (Bao, 2020, p.113). It took universities days to transfer their face-to-face courses and materials online, with faculty members, lecturers, professors, and students being essentially deficient in some online skills. The research attracted much attention as it became of the earliest published papers (accepted for publication March 20, 2020) focusing on the more or less successful instructional online strategies in the tertiary institutions.

Educational Research: Tackling the Pandemic Challenges
This editorial does not aim to make a detailed in-depth review of the publications on the Covid-19 impact on education. Anyway, we have examined a range of the relevant research published in 2020 and 2021 and found that there are clear-cut topics of interest across the educational aspects of the pandemic. As JLE tends to stay within its scope, we have focused on higher education issues, L2 and EFL teaching, psychological aspects of adaptivity to emergency remote learning and teaching, technology-driven language teaching during a pandemic, online assessment in education, especially in language learning. The most of the research agenda is not brand-new. To be precise, it looks like revisiting many interrelated topics in the context of emergency shift to new patterns of teaching and learning.
During the pandemic, universities arose as the centres engaged in conducting comprehensive research aimed at filling the knowledge gaps as far as emergency remote learning and teaching are concerned. Secondary schools do not have enough resources and competencies to take up the issues independently on their own. Teaching L2 and foreign languages has been tackled as a separate and specific area with its unique approaches in the following research fields and sub-fields and selected sample publications: (1) emergency teaching and learning languages with technology during a pandemic, including emergency remote teaching and learning (Charania et al., 2021;Cheung, 2021;Choi & Chung, 2021;Hazaea, Bin-Hady & Toujani, 2021;Ionela, 2020;Levina, Zubanova & Ivanov, 2021;Moser, Wei & Brenner, 2021); (2) online assessment in teaching languages (Abrar-ul-Hassan, Douglas & Turner, 2021; Mahapatra, 2021); (3) psychological challenges, adaptivity, learner and teacher autonomy, student engagement and motivation, teacher stress and coping (Almusharraf & Khahro, 2020;Resnik & Dewaele, 2021;Gregersen, Mercer & MacIntyre, 2021;Heydarnejad, Zareian, Ghaniabadi & Adel, 2021).

Defining New Phenomena: Research on New Word Coinages and Usages
All major fateful periods in human history always give rise to new word coinages and usages in all world languages to reflect the emerging phenomena and attendant circumstances. The pandemic broke out in the time of worldwide access to linguistic big data that registered a simultaneous and synchronized inflow of the new words and new meanings into almost all languages.
The most impressive influx was registered as early as the first four-six months from the beginning of the pandemic. The Oxford English Dictionary regularly contributes updates to the dictionary, with some 100-500 entries every 2-4 months. The year of 2020 was not an exception. It is surprising that really new coinages in English were few covidiot,covident). Most of the updates to the Oxford dictionary covered words with new connotations. You will find below an abridged list of the neologisms, new connotations of the existing words, frequently used words and phrases related to or associated with the Covid-19 pandemic. Where appropriate, we state the years, when these words or phrases were originally or repeatedly registered in the discourse (see the brackets). It is natural that research publications on neologisms should come out amid the emerging new social and political realia. In this instance, the publications were not numerous but arouse wide public interest as they concentrated on the emerging discourse.
The trend was registered in various languages: in Polish (Cierpich-Kozieł, 2020; Jablonka, 2021); in Arabic (Haddad & Montero-Martínez, 2020); in Portuguese (Jablonka, 2021); in Spanish (Zholobova, 2021), etc. The bulk of the new words and usages were initially formed in English and borrowed by other languages. The researchers single out metaphor-based neologisms, consider linguistic innovation during the Covid-19 pandemic, analyse the ways the lexeme "coronavirus" influences various languages.
Trending neologisms in English also became the object of study, with several articles containing a deep linguistic analysis (Al-Salman & Haider, 2021;Asif, Zhiyong, Iram & Nisar, 2021;Lei, Yang & Huang, 2021;Wang & Huang, 2021). The researchers focus on the ways the new words are coined, the spread of the new usages of the words and phrases dating back to previous epidemics or associated circumstances. A striking feature of the present-day lexical update is rather frequent use of medical terms in everyday discourse of mass media and people at large. "These terms are used widely on social media and press conferences of different medical fields globally" (Asif, Zhiyong, Iram & Nisar, 2021). For example, they include "asymptomatic", "community spread", "flatten the curve", "ventilator", immunity", names of medicines, and others. Social media contributed much to the spread of these terms and new usages.

Scholarly Publishing and Peer Review in the Context of the Covid-19 Pandemic
Though, the medical scholarly community in China initially had an edge over their colleagues elsewhere as the Covid-19 outbreak started there, the involvement of researchers in other countries followed the way the virus was spreading (India, Europe, the USA). An analysis of publications on both Covid-19 and its impact on education shows the similar pattern, with the USA, the UK, and China being the most numerous publications (Scopus; Dimensions; PubMed).
The drive to get their research published, on authors' part, and to bring out articles written on the top priority themes, on journals' part, resulted in the flood of Covid-19 publications. It raised again the problem of critical peer reviewing, as fast-track publishing eventually induces inadequate or unfair evaluation of some research. As peer review aims to ensure that only valuable scientific contributions based on scientific methodology should be published, its shorter time and fast-track conditions might ruin unbiased review feedback. Thus, the scholarly community is inclined to suggest that open peer review should be encouraged as it is the simplest and most efficient way to evaluate new research without bias or mistake. Open peer review and Publons may promote the ethical standards in reviewing by detecting fraudulent peer reviews and fake reviewers' identities via proving digital identity verification and blocking fake reviewers' accounts (Teixeira da Silva & Al-Khatib, 2021).
One more feature of publishing during the Covid-19 pandemic is open access and preprints. In his interview to The Scholarly Kitchen blog, Daniel Hook, CEO of Digital Science, underlines that "many publishers have made the research … freely available through a variety of different mechanisms". 6 Open access popularity is proved by the statistics of the Covid-19 publications. 7 He also comments on preprints as being a "double-edged sword" with their universal access to the research content fresh from the labs. Immediate awareness of scientists of the cutting-edge research combined with open pre-publication discussion may occasionally result in misinterpretation of the research results by "general public" that has no understanding of scholarly communication. Thus, general public sometimes may come to wrong conclusions. 8 In addressing old and new challenges that scholarly publishing faces, world scholarly community will have to further proceed with Open Science without delay, especially against the pandemic backdrop.

Concluding Remarks
The Covid-19 pandemic and pandemic-induced rather long period of constraints in social life worldwide have caused some shifts in social patterns applicable to education and scholarly publishing. Education has suffered from shifts to emergency remote teaching and a new paradigm of schooling and learning in the essentially virtual environment. The latter has become the major cause of stress and disengagement for students. With much progress in overcoming slow or delayed adaptation of students and teachers to the new virtual challenges, education at large is revisiting many concepts previously considered immutable or habitual (assessment in language learning; student and teacher engagement; teacher stress and coping; emotion regulation, etc.).
The pressure to urgently publish articles on the emergent topics resulted in the avalanche publishing, with the publishers introducing shorter fast-track peer review. The latter has led to some ill-conceived and sometimes errant publications.
The Covid-19 pandemic has generated a great inflow of new words and usages into languages throughout the world, increasing the research published on the topic.
Though still being formed, the emerging research agenda combines publishing brand-new issues and revisiting older concepts and topics.

Declaration of Competing Interest
None declared.