Thanking in L2 Greek: The role of proficiency in L2 pragmatic competence

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Athanasia Gkouma
Maria Andria
Georgios Mikros

The aim of the current study is to investigate the role of second language (L2) proficiency in the pragmatic competence of learners of L2 Greek. More specifically, it aims at exploring whether L2 proficiency can have an impact on the strategies that L2 learners use in order to express the speech act of thanking in L2 Greek. Participants were thirty-one (N=31) learners of Greek at different proficiency levels (from A2 to C2) who were enrolled in a summer intensive course of Greek at a university language school in Athens, Greece. Additionally, a group of native speakers of Greek has been included as a baseline (N=30). Oral data were elicited through a series of open role plays which represented various communicative situations with different social parameters. Furthermore, a retrospective verbal protocol has been used in order to gain more insights into the way L2 learners perform the speech act of thanking. Results showed that there is a difference in the number of strategies of L2 learners across the different proficiency levels, which is more evident between beginners and advanced learners. However, findings seem to suggest that the role of proficiency is not clear-cut and it also depends, firstly, on the social parameters of each communicative situation and also on learners’ familiarization with each situation. The study concludes by discussing some implications for L2 pedagogy.

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How to Cite
Gkouma, Athanasia et al. “Thanking in L2 Greek: The role of proficiency in L2 pragmatic competence”. CLIL. Journal of Innovation and Research in Plurilingual and Pluricultural Education, 2020, vol.VOL 3, no. 2, pp. 57-70, https://raco.cat/index.php/clil/article/view/372705.
Author Biographies

Athanasia Gkouma, National and Kapodisitrian University of Athens

Athanasia Gkouma és doctoranda en Lingüística Aplicada a la Universitat Nacional i Kapodistríaca d'Atenes. La seva recerca se centra en la competència pragmàtica i la consciència sociocultural en l’adquisició de grec com a L2. Actualment és professora de llengua grega i també treballa com a ajudant d'investigació en el programa de recerca LETEGR2.

Maria Andria, National and Kapodisitrian University of Athens

Llicenciada en Filologia Grega i Lingüística per la Universitat d'Atenes (Grècia). Doctora Internacional en Lingüística Aplicada i Adquisició de Segones Llengües per la Universitat De Barcelona. Actualment és Investigadora Postdoctoral en el Departament de Lingüística de la Universitat d'Atenes, on dirigeix com a Investigadora Principal el projecte LETEGR2.

Georgios Mikros, Hamad Bin Khalifa University

George Mikros és actualment professor en el Màster en Humanitats Digitals de la Universitat Hamad Bin Khalifa a Qatar. Des del 1999 i fins 2019 va ser professor de lingüística computacional i quantitativa a la Universitat d'Atenes, Grècia. Les seves principals línies de recerca són l'estilística computacional i les lingüístiques quantitativa, computacional i forense.