Studying Japanese in Japan By: Caroline Zeiher, Meghan Baghat, Georgina Armstrong Our Story! Caroline: Fukuroi Shogyou HS (now advanced level) Meghan: Kawane HS, (now advanced level) Georgina: Fukuroi HS, (now intermediate level) Today: A. Studying through JET B. The JLPT C. Print Resources D. Online Resources E. Unofficial Study F. Facing Discouragement G. Study to benefit you Study Through JET CLAIR Courses: Beginner, Intermediate, Translation/Interpretation Pros and Cons vary depending on level How to supplement your learning with additional resources How to actually learn the language with them! The JLPT Dates: first Sunday of December/July Fee: 5,500 yen Five levels: JLPT Scoring JLPT Pass/Fail: JLPT Application Sample Questions to test yourself: http://www.jlpt.jp/e/samples/forlearners.html Application: JLPT Post-Application About a week before the test: voucher arrives in the mail Test site will be a school or center in your area You can’t park there, and you have to be on time! JLPT levels N5: some basic grammar, Kanji, slow simple conversations N4: more basic grammar, Kanji, faster basic conversations N3: everyday Japanese, more difficult readings like newspapers, near-natural conversations N2: variety of circumstances to a degree, many different readings and conversations N1: variety of circumstances, many different readings and conversations Print Resources Books for general study: Genki, 501 Verbs, Japanese for Busy People, Remembering the Kanji (Heisig Method) Books for the JLPT: Nihongo Challenge/Somatome, Kanzen Master, Official books (can download online too) Best books for beginners are Genki and Nihongo Challenge (“classroom” Japanese) Online Resources: Anki Downloadable software pre-made decks, searchable on the website can edit to adjust for how much you want to review per day make your own flashcards Online Resources: Memrise Use/make flashcards on the website compete against your friends iphone app to study on your phone more interactive than Anki Use visual/verbal clues to help memorize Online Resources: Internet cont. Games: Slime Forest Adventure Add-ons: Rikaichan, Perapera (Firefox only) Dictionary: Imiwa App, electronic denshi jisho Online: jisho.org for Kanji dictionary, Tofugu for studying advice/cultural background Writing help: Lang-8, connects with native speakers “Unnoficial” Study Read books you know in English!/ Listen to books on tape Dramas/ variety shows on TV/ Crunchyroll Watch Japanese movies/overseas movies dubbed in Japanese (from Tsutaya, etc) Japanese Instagram, Twitter, Tumblr, and Vine users Everyday Life Without thinking, you use Japanese to: make friends at work make friends in extracurricular activities connect with students get food, pay bills...literally everything!!! You learn/use more everyday Facing Discouragement? Sometimes... You will get frustrated (A LOT at first) It will be hard to see your own progress Some schools want you to speak English only you will fail a tests/ many tests you will forget what you don’t use (over and over) But! Don’t quit!!! (taking breaks are OK) Talk about it to other people (ALTs or Japanese people) Have group study sessions Even Japanese people have problems with Japanese study (especially Kanji) Think about puppies Study to Benefit You Make a study plan that works best for you SMART GoalsSpecific: What do you want to improve Measurable: How long will it take Assignable- What will you have to do Realistic – What will your results be Time-related – When will you see results Our Study Plans: What has worked before and what we are doing now... Caroline: Meghan: Georgina: Effects of Your Study Will open doors to more opportunities People will appreciate your efforts Will help you keep your mind active Able to do more things independently Will be able to take Japan back with you after JET Work Cited JLPT website: http://www.jlpt.jp/e/ JEES website: http://info.jees-jlpt.jp/ Anki: http://ankisrs.net/ Memrise: https://www.memrise.com/welcome/