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Background: In recent years, English language education has increasingly shifted from cognitive-oriented paradigms to socially situated and culturally mediated perspectives grounded in Vygotsky’s Sociocultural Theory (SCT). This framework emphasizes interaction, mediation, identity negotiation, and collaborative meaning-making as core mechanisms of language learning. While sociocultural research in English education has expanded rapidly, a systematic bibliometric synthesis focusing specifically on undergraduate English language learning remains limited.Purpose: This bibliometric analysis aims to map and analyze global research trends on the sociocultural impact on undergraduates’ English language learning between 2020 and 2024, identifying intellectual structures, key contributors, and emerging thematic directions, thereby offering a clearer understanding of the field’s development and informing future research and practice.Materials and Methods: This bibliometric analysis was conducted using the Dimensions AI database, focusing on articles published between 2020 and 2024. Following PRISMA guidelines, 352 open-access, peer-reviewed articles were selected using the keywords “Sociocultural” and “English study”. Data were analyzed through performance analysis, bibliographic coupling and co-occurrence keyword mapping in VOSviewer to uncover conceptual linkages and thematic clusters including top authors, influential documents, prominent sources, and emerging thematic clusters.Results: Findings indicate a steady growth of publications and citations during the 2020-2024 period, reflecting the expanding influence of sociocultural perspectives in English language education. Three major thematic clusters emerged: (1) Sociocultural Agency and Identity Construction, emphasizing multilingual identity, learner agency, and contextual negotiation; (2) Pedagogical Innovation and Cultural Interaction, focusing on interaction, development, digital mediation, and culturally responsive teaching; and (3) Global Perspectives on Linguistic Diversity, addressing English as a lingua franca, cross-cultural communication, and internationalized English learning environments. Leading contributors included the United Kingdom, China, and the United States, demonstrating strong cross-regional engagement.Conclusion: The results collectively signify a shift in pedagogical paradigms ranging from traditional cognitive frameworks to sociocultural embedded approaches that foreground learner participation, collaborative meaning-making, and cultural mediation. By mapping these developments, the study provides conceptual and empirical foundations for advancing future research, innovative curriculum design, and informed policy formulation, establishing sociocultural perspectives as a cornerstone of contemporary English language education.
Published in: Journal of Education and Training Studies
Volume 14, Issue 2, pp. 257-257