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1. I don't know if you are a liberal arts or a science major, if it is a liberal arts degree, you need to reach the N1 level, if it is a science major, you need to reach at least the N2 level.
2. The biggest feature of graduate school in Japan is the tutor system, if you apply directly, you need to submit other written materials such as a research plan and direction letter, and after arousing the interest of the supervisor, you will participate in an interview, and become a graduate student after passing the interview. After studying as a graduate student for a period of time, after the supervisor thinks that you have the ability to study as a full-fledged graduate student, you will be asked to take the graduate exam, and after passing it, you will become a full-fledged graduate student (seminarian). Therefore, it is not only a matter of Japanese language proficiency when you go to graduate school in Japan, but also whether you have your own opinions about your professional courses.
3. Most public universities in Japan require English scores, and it is recommended to take a TOEFL score during your time in Japan, which will expand the range of schools you can choose.
4. If you don't have many courses in your senior year, it is recommended that you go to Kansai Language College in April of your senior year, which is the language school with the highest admission rate in Japan, and has rich experience in college counseling, meticulous and responsible. This is a special program for new undergraduate students held by Kansai Language School. In the future, you can have two directions of effort, half a year as a graduate student, or strive to enter a Japanese university as a graduate student in April of the following year after graduation, which should be the fastest time for undergraduate graduates to enter a Japanese university as a graduate student.
If you still have questions, you can browse the articles on our blog "Oriental Blog Study Abroad Experts Talk about Study Abroad", especially the articles in the undergraduate column.
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1. If you are studying in a national or public university, the language requirements are different according to different majors, and the general requirements for liberal arts majors are N2 or above, and N3 for science and engineering is enough.
2. If you apply, you also need to provide a research plan, foreign language proficiency certificate, degree certificate, transcript, etc., among which the research plan is the key to your application, which directly reflects your research direction and research ability.
3. In addition to Japanese and English, if you want to enter a first-class university like Tokyo University, you also need to provide English scores, and a TOEFL score of about 80 in general schools is enough.
If you still have any questions, feel free to hi me.
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Depending on the major, it seems that the Japanese language requirements are different, but the education I studied in Japan was also Japanese level 2, and I applied to Nagoya University, and now I am in Japan. At that time, his family could directly apply to a national university for graduate school, without going through a language school.
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Level 4. The difficulty of Japanese 203 is probably between N2 and N1, and sometimes it involves some N1 grammar.
I studied on my own for five months with the goal of passing the line, focusing on taking the test, ignoring the listening, and only learning the vocabulary, grammar, and reading parts. It's okay to get a score of 70 in the graduate school entrance examination.
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You can take the Japanese language test for the graduate school entrance examination. If you take the second foreign language of the National Graduate Examination, you can choose Japanese 203 In short, it is Japanese for the public course of the unified examination. This is subject to the admissions announcement of the recruiting institution.
Postgraduate Entrance Examination of Public Japanese (203) involves the major majors of major universities, which is a unified proposition for the whole country, and is suitable for non-Japanese majors.
In many schools, majors in literature and history, science and engineering, art, and economics and management can choose 203 Japanese in the preliminary examination. It is a compulsory foreign language for postgraduate entrance examinations, including English, Russian, Japanese and other languages. In most cases, you will be able to take the English test, but if the test subject is Japanese, you can choose to take the Japanese language test if the test subject is officially announced by the school.
Difficulty of postgraduate entrance examinationCompared with the postgraduate English entrance examination, it can be said that the difficulty of the postgraduate Japanese entrance examination is much smaller, because after all, there are more people who can speak English, so for students who are very scummy in English and have a certain foundation in Japanese, the postgraduate Japanese 203 can be said to be a gospel or a shortcut.
Exam question typesAdvantages of Japanese for graduate school entrance examinations1. 70% of the vocabulary in the Japanese syllabus is kanji.
2. As long as the foreign language can be taken in the public Japanese 203 major.
3. All major universities and colleges of foreign Chinese across the country recruit 203 Japanese candidates with minor languages.
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If you study Japanese, you can go to graduate school.
Japanese language graduate school is further divided into academic graduate students and professional graduate students.
The professional type is widely promoted by the country in recent years, that is, a master's degree in translation, but not every school has it, the advantage is that it only takes two years to study, and the things learned are more practical, and the disadvantages are: the society is not too recognized; You can't continue to study for a PhD; Tuition fees are several thousand more expensive than academic ones.
If you want to take the civil service exam in the future and decide not to study for a doctorate, but just want to get a master's diploma, then a professional master's degree is a good choice.
The academic master's degree is engaged in research, and the general school is divided into three directions: Japanese linguistics, Japanese literature, and Japanese society and culture. Generally, you have to study for two and a half to three years, and after finishing it, you will either take the civil service exam or continue to study for a doctorate and become a teacher. The social recognition is still much higher than that of the professional type.
Which direction to choose from Sanhe Yuan depends on your own Xizen brother state, and there are generally many candidates for the latter two, but if you want to be a teacher in the future, it must be more suitable for linguistics. In terms of schools, the Foreign Affairs College is good, but most of the people who come out are not diplomats but engaged in intelligence, and the good thing is that the duration of study is two years, but it is also an academic master's degree.
The University of Foreign Trade and Economic Cooperation is very good, and it has a regional country research institute in it, and there are Japanese research students in this direction. In addition, those who study Japanese know the journal "Japanese Language Study and Research", which is owned by the Foreign Trade and Economic Cooperation Office. Moreover, it is also a two-year study period, and the research will also be more economics and trade, so it is more practical than other academic masters.
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It's funny on the first floor, are you studying Japanese?
It's so easy for you to learn anything
The landlord is a high school student, how can he have so much time to study every day
It should be a little sister or a little brother.
Japanese belongs to those who come in laughing and crying and go out.
It's hard to say this time, but the average Japanese major at a university generally takes about a year and a half to take the second level exam, and you have to decide it depending on your progress.
And I'm especially not in favor of self-taught Japanese without guidance.
Not only did I learn dumb Japanese, but there were many things that I couldn't understand well, and Japanese was a very subtle and ambiguous language.
In addition, since the test in July this year, it has been changed to a new ability test, which pays more attention to practical application ability, and the requirements for listening have been increased.
Since you're just in high school now, you have to have a priority.
It is important to lay a foundation in high school.
So, good luck
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It depends on what kind of person you are, if you study very seriously and can memorize words and grammar very well. In the past six months, I have been able to pass the cram school from 0 to 2.
However, the new exam rules focus on listening, and you have to pass all parts before you can pass at the end, so you need to practice your listening all the time and listen to Japanese every day. If you're serious, you can learn it in one year. But if you stop studying, it's easy to learn today and forget tomorrow, so you can't tell the time.
Overall, getting started with Japanese is easy. Exams are even more of a strong point for Chinese. It's all about yourself.
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Level 2 is on the first Sunday of July and December.
It shouldn't be difficult.
I guess it's okay to study hard for a few months.
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To mix up a passing grade, as the first floor says, simple.
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The Japanese Language Test for Graduate School Entrance Examination and the Japanese Language Proficiency Test are two completely different departments, and they cannot be measured by a unified standard. Therefore, if you have scored 40 points in the Japanese language class for the graduate school entrance examination, you must be assigned to one of the levels of the Japanese language level. Let's talk about the Japanese level test:
(1) Grade judgment
Taking the most commonly used textbook "New Edition of Standard Japanese for Communication between China and Japan" as an example, the first volume of "New Edition of Standard Japanese for Communication between China and Japan" is equivalent to level N5 of Japanese, with a vocabulary of about 1400; The new edition of Standard Japanese for Sino-Japanese Communication is equivalent to N4 level in Japanese, with a vocabulary of about 1550; The new version of the Standard Japanese for Communication between China and Japan is equivalent to the second level of Japanese, with a vocabulary of about 4,700. At present, there are few first-level Japanese textbooks in Japan.
If you want to apply for the Japanese N5 level, you should at least complete the grammar of the first volume of the "New Standard Japanese for Chinese and Japanese Communication" and master at least 1,000 words; To apply for Level 3 N4, you should have completed at least the grammar of the new version of Standard Japanese for Communication in the first volume of the elementary level and mastered at least 2,000 words; To apply for N2 level, you should have completed at least the grammar of the two intermediate levels of the "New Edition of Standard Japanese for Chinese and Japanese Communication", and mastered at least 8,000 words; Level N1 requires mastery of at least 12,000 words.
If you are planning to start learning Japanese, but you have little foundation, the first thing is to clarify your purpose of learning Japanese, even if it is just for interest, and make your own stage plan, such as about half a year to take the 4th level, 1 year to take the 3rd level, and two years to take the 2nd level. Recommend a skirt, the beginning is nine three four, the middle is five zero four, the end is seven seven five, you can find it in order to combine, there are tutorial materials you can receive, can provide great help for the study of Japanese.
(2) Application level
Generally speaking, it is not necessary to take the Japanese level N5 exam. Because the content of the Japanese N5 level is the simplest Japanese grammar and vocabulary of the brigade. The level of Japanese N5 and N4 is not much different, it is relatively close, and it is easy to rise from N5 and N4 to N3, so it is better to apply for N5 and N4 than to apply for N3 directly.
The gap between N3 and N2 is relatively large, and if Japanese companies do not have very high requirements for Japanese, N2 is fine, and the Japanese for graduate school entrance examination is also close to N2 level, so it is more useful to apply for Japanese N2 level, and it is also the largest number of applicants every year. The goals of those who apply for the N1 level of Japanese in Japan are basically clear, mainly for college students majoring in Japanese, and for those who have to take the N1 level for work reasons, in general, there are not many people who apply for the N1 level. Therefore, the number of people who take the Japanese language proficiency test is basically the largest number of people in the N2 level, the number of people in the N3 and N1 levels is similar, and the N5 and N4 levels are the least.
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Categories: Foreign Languages Abroad.
Problem description: If you choose Japanese as a foreign language for graduate school entrance examination, what level of Japanese should you reach? Is it difficult to take the postgraduate entrance examination with a daily fight? I've heard people say it's simple.
Analysis: Of course, it's much simpler than English, and that's what I used when I was in graduate school. At that time, we passed the first level, so when we reviewed, we basically spent all our time in professional classes, just spent about an hour a day listening and listening to and reading it, just don't be too rusty, and it should be no problem to score 70 points in the graduate school entrance examination.
But don't take it too lightly, and take a look at the syllabus to see if you've met all the requirements. Also, listening must be listened to every day, and it is good to relax by reading Japanese when you are tired of watching professional classes.
When I was admitted to graduate school, I was at the first level of the Japanese Sky Wild Language just passed the previous year, and I don't know what your situation is, if you have been thrown away for a while, you still have to review more. I think it's so rough that if it's a level 2 level, it should be no problem to go to graduate school, and naturally spend more time on Japanese.
This is just my personal experience, I don't know if it's suitable for you, I believe that as long as you work hard, you can succeed, I wish you good results.
I'll take the exam in July, hehe. However, now I have more than 280 points in the questions, and there is no big problem in passing. >>>More
I took level 2 last year.
Generally, the papers will be sent in advance, but before the time starts, it is certain that you will be 5 minutes in advance, because before the exam, you have to send out all the papers and answer sheets, and you have to write a lot of names and test numbers. But be careful!! I won't let you open the volume until the start time. >>>More
Of course, listen and practice more.
During the listening test, you will be given a piece of paper on which you can write. So at home, when you practice listening, take a piece of paper and write down all the parts that you have heard. You don't need to write in Japanese, you can write in Chinese, pinyin, draw anything. >>>More
Answer: There are no restrictions on age, occupation, education, region, ethnicity, nationality, school or not, etc. >>>More
If you don't pay the fee within 72 hours after registration, the quota will be cancelled, so you can go to the 21st to brush and see** If you are in a hurry, don't just look at your own city, if time and money allow, see if you can report from other places, if you can, report directly >>>More