JLPT 1&2 Study Guide
JLPT 1&2 Study Guide
JLPT 1&2 Study Guide
December 2001
Before you decide to take the JLPT, you should do some serious
thinking. Ask yourself if you really need to take it because if you
don't, you will be putting yourself through a lot of aggravation
for nothing. In fact, a lot of people will tell you that taking the
third and fourth grades is a complete waste of time. You can't
get a job with them, you can't use them to get into university,
and the only people who will be even vaguely interested in your
having them are other Japanese students or teachers. If you just
want to "Find out my level" or "motivate myself", then see if you
can talk to a Japanese person or set some other goal like
reading the newspaper. There's no reason to waste $50, fill out
your name and address 17 times on the mind-bogglingly
complex application and take a two hour train ride to the middle
of nowhere just to motivate yourself or find out how much you
know.
Until the year 2001, the JLPT first grade was a requirement for
anyone who wanted to attend a public university in Japan, but
from 2002 it is going to be replaced with the Nihongo Ryuugaku
Shiken (which is said rumoured to be easier and more practical).
The JLPT will continue to be important for people who want to
be translators or work at Japanese companies.
THE APPLICATION
The test itself costs 5200 yen and must be sent by registered
mail which costs another 600 yen, bringing the grand total to
over 6000 yen.
There are three sections in the JLPT. First is the kanji and
vocabulary section (Moji Goi). Next is the listening section
(Chokai), which is the easiest part of the test. Last comes the
reading and grammar section (Dokkai Bunpo), the section where
you are most likely to have the first nervous breakdown of your
life.
The test starts around 10 am and finishes around 4:30. There is
a two hour break after the first section and a one hour break
after the second section.
The entire test is multiple choice and each question has four
possible answers.
General Strategy
The JLPT requires you to be familiar with a lot of vocabulary and
grammatical patterns that you never hear in everyday
conversation and almost everyone who takes it expresses
frustration about how many useless things they had to learn in
order to pass it. The listening section is full of trick questions
and the test often includes somewhat archaic Japanese. If you
have not taken practice tests and prepared specifically for the
sorts of questions asked on this test, you are almost guaranteed
to be in for a shock, no matter how good your Japanese is.
Most people who did not grow up in a country that uses Kanji
will have to go to a full-time Japanese school in order to pass
the JLPT. Learning Japanese is not like learning French.
Learning to read is so difficult that it is not something that most
people can do in their spare time. I started from a low-
intermediate level and had to study reading and grammar for six
months before I could pass the 2kyuu.
The JLPT gets more difficult every year. A lot of people say that
the present 2kyuu is as difficult as the 1kyuu was when the test
started. Just because you can pass last year's practice test is
not a guarantee that you will be able to pass this year's test. The
good news is that question formats do not usually change from
year to year so you can improve your score a lot by taking
practice tests.
There are usually two answers that are obviously wrong so once
you have eliminated them, you have a fifty percent chance of
getting the question right. Using a process of elimination is a
very good way to get difficult answers but don't spend too much
time thinking.
take a practice test before you start studying. You can buy a
copy of last year's test for around 1200 yen from most large
Japanese bookshops. Find out what your weak-points are and
work on improving them.
Get the Nihongo Journal. They have practice tests every month
(alternating between the 1kyuu in even numbered months and
the 2kyuu in odd numbered months). It is available at most large
bookstores in Japan. You can get a subscription from overseas
by visiting any bookstore that sells the Nihongo Journal or you
can buy back issues over the internet at:
http://www.alc.co.jp/mag/njback.html (This page is in Japanese
only). Each issue costs 1,180 yen and a yearly subscription
costs 13,400 yen.
The Kanji section of the test is surprisingly easy. If you can read
a six or seven hundred Kanji, you can pass the 2kyuu kanji
section by doing some guesswork and using logic. There is
always plenty of time for this section and you usually have time
to go back and check at least some of your answers.
express
surprised
proof
repeat
Print them out and fold the paper in half. Then write out the
pronunciations of all the kanji in the centre column and check them
when you are finished. I learned three or four hundred kanji a month this
way when I was studying for the 2kyuu. I made around 40 worksheets
with about 30 kanji on each. For me the secret to learning kanji is seeing
them over and over in a short time period so I would put about 15 new
kanji and 15 kanji from previous sheets on every page and found it to be
a very effective way of studying.
The vocabulary section is, surprisingly, more difficult than the kanji
section. If you're like me, you have a lot of trouble remembering
onomatopoeic words like harahara, dokidoki, etc. If you just try to
memorise the meaning of each word, you may find that you do not retain
them well, or that you get confused when presented with two words that
sound similar or have similar meanings. Instead of just memorising
words, try to remember a short phrase that expresses the meaning of
the word. I also put these short phrases in my study sheets, and find
them to be very effective in helping me to retain vocabulary.
LISTENING SECTION
LISTENING STRATEGIES
Most people agree that the listening section is the easiest part of the
test. If your reading is weak, you will need to get a very high score in
this section to compensate. Here are a few hints that will improve your
score.
I find that taking notes doesn't help me at all and actually lowers my
score because I tend to miss key points because I am concentrating too
much on individual words or am concentrating on writing the last
sentence. I also miss a lot of the trick questions when I am writing.
Sometimes you start concentrating so hard on what you are writing, that
your brain stops thinking and you make mistakes that you wouldn't if
you were just listening intently. The only time I take notes is on the
questions where they throw a lot of numbers and information at you.
You can learn to recognise these questions by taking a few practice
tests.
Watch out for the graphs and maps. Most people agree that they are the
most difficult part of the listening section. Also, the pictures in this test
are NOT used to give you hints about the content of the questions as
they are in other tests. They are there to confuse you and make the
questions harder. Most people get better scores on the non-picture
section than they do in the picture section. When the tape is playing the
example questions you would be well advised to flip through the
question book and familiarise yourself with the pictures carefully. I
always find the graph questions and circle the points where lines
intersect and write the numbers that correspond to the points on the
lines so that I don't have to waste time while I'm listening. Sometimes
they have charts with lots of Kanji on them, so you should check the
Kanji and write them in hiragana or romaji so that you don't have to
waste time while listening.
The Nihongo Journal includes a CD every month and it has a lot of good
listening practice.
Get ready for the shortest 70 minutes of your life (or 90 in the case of the
1kyuu). Everyone who takes this test says, "I could have passed if I'd
just had more time." Unfortunately the test was designed for Chinese
and Koreans who have grown up reading Kanji all their life. You have to
answer 21 questions about nine reading passages and 35 short answer
grammar questions. There is one page-long reading passage that you
have to answer seven questions about and then two slightly shorter
passages in section two, which have three or four questions each. Then
there are six more relatively short passages which have just one or two
questions each.
Grammar Strategy:
Reading Strategy:
There is a list of textbooks that will help you study for the
reading section in Appendix 1. Doing practice tests will improve
your score tremendously too.
APPENDIX 1: Books
Donna Toki Dou Tsukau Nihongo Hyougen Bunkei 500 (500
Essential Japanese Expressions: A Guide to Correct Usage of
Key Sentence Patterns) by Etsuko Tomomatsu, Jun Miyamoto,
and Masako Wakuri. This book has 500 expressions that you
need to know the grammar section of the 1kyuu (You only need
about 300 for the 2kyuu). The grammatical explanations are all
in Japanese so you will need someone to help you if you are
studying with this book. It notes which expressions are for the
2kyuu and which are for the 1kyuu. There is also a workbook
that goes with it, which is a very good investment. This is
probably the most important textbook for students who are
taking the JLPT.
Internet Resources
http://www.iijnet.or.jp/jpf/jlpt/contents/main-e.html--This is the
official homepage or the JLPT but except for listing the official
test dates and application deadlines, it is almost completely
useless.
http://www.thbz.org/kanjimots/jlpt.php3--vocabulary lists
http://www.geocities.com/easykanji/--E-Kanji is a website
designed to help students of Japanese improve their reading. It
consists of reading passages, in which every Kanji is hyper-
linked to a pronunciation key and a definition of the word to
make reading easy. No more Kanji dictionaries. No more giving
up on a reading because of one or two difficult kanji.
tokorode, sae, ireba, uchi ni, to itte, you ni, tame ni, kara to
itte, ni kanshite wa, wake ni wa ikenai, toshitara, dakara to itte,
ni hanshite, no sei ka
toshite mo, dokoro ka, nai koto ni wa, koto ni wa, dake atte,
toshite mo
You should also know mono vs. koto vs. wake (and all their
various forms like kotonara vs. mononara, koto vs. koto da, etc)
cold.
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If you have any tips or studying strategies for the JLPT please
send them to me at [email protected]. I also welcome
questions, comments or criticisms.
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