Tzadeck Wrote:Hmm, I suppose it depends on the individual. You say listening is hard for you, but for me it's by far the easiest section on the test. I live in Japan though, so I get tons of listening practice, and I'm used to figuring out conversations even if I can't understand 100% of the vocabulary.
For me the hardest part of N1 is vocabulary, because I've never really been able to bring myself to SRS regularly, and it's hard to learn enough vocabulary without SRS. I read regularly, but I read fun stuff, so it doesn't really cover a wide range of vocabulary. If I read more newspapers or magazines I think they would prepare me a lot better for N1.
That said, the part of N1 I did worst on was the reading, but it seems like the N1 reading section in July was hard for a LOT of people.
Right now I'm struggling with listening because even though I may have seen the words, I haven't really heard the words. I think my understanding/processing is a tad slow too, and when I miss a word or phrase, I dwell on it which makes me miss the next words/phrases.
(FWIW, whenever I took standardized tests in primary school, listening was always my worst subject too. Perhaps it's not a language problem, lol.)
Is there a difference in question-style or different requirements for understanding? Or was it just mostly a vocabulary issue? How about time, did you need to read fast?
@caivano: I feel that after reviewing the answers and re-reviewing the text, I can understand N1 reading/listening. It hasn't been overwhelming yet, but I do spend quite a bit of time on it. I can understand needing N2 vocab and N2 grammar books since you'll be tested on those specifically, but I felt like for reading and listening you could get away with a higher level, unless I'm mistaken somewhere which is what I'm trying to get out of Tzadeck. =)
@jonuhey: I have...
KM 2kyuu Grammar
Soumatome N2 Vocab
KM N1 Grammar, N1 Listening
Soumatome N1 Vocab
Unicom N1 Reading
I felt like I wasn't able to really do KM 2kyuu Grammar until I built up my vocab from completing KO2001. I also used DJG as a reference since the explanations in KM 2kyuu were sometimes too concise. (You'll have to buy all three, since the book seemed to include sections from basic, intermediate, and advanced.)
For what it's worth, I added my first 2kyuu grammar sentences last November, and I'm just about to finish it up this week. The vocab book took me 5 months. (It says "only 8 weeks" with a vocab section per day, but we SRS disciples know better than that!)
I find this description of the JLPT fascinating and hilarious:
http://www.outpostnine.com/gaijin_smash/...-kyuu.html