Passed N1 on my 5th Attempt!!! やったぞ!
Vocab/Grammar: 40/60
Reading : 38/60
Listening : 43/60
Total 121/180
Same as erlog
Vocab/Grammar: 40/60
Reading : 38/60
Listening : 43/60
Total 121/180
Same as erlog
atreya Wrote:Passed N1 on my 5th Attempt!!! やったぞ!Awesome job. All that matters is that you finally got it. Failure is the reason why we succeed. I'm planning on taking it this December (first attempt). Got any tips for a first-timer?
Vocab/Grammar: 40/60
Reading : 38/60
Listening : 43/60
Total 121/180
Same as erlog
Zgarbas Wrote:We have a big clock on the wall+the nice organizer ladies draw a circle and announce us whenever a quarter of the time has passed. I guess it depends on the exam location.I see, in my case the one in charge of our class (who was japanese) only announced the last 5 minutes.
ta12121 Wrote:I really feel like a huge burden has been taken off my shoulders. Now I can work more on improving my business Japanese skills and learn finance/economics related Japanese to improve my interpretation skills during board meetings.atreya Wrote:Passed N1 on my 5th Attempt!!! やったぞ!Awesome job. All that matters is that you finally got it. Failure is the reason why we succeed. I'm planning on taking it this December (first attempt). Got any tips for a first-timer?
Vocab/Grammar: 40/60
Reading : 38/60
Listening : 43/60
Total 121/180
Same as erlog

Hint666 Wrote:Didn't fill the password form :/. What to do?Then you just have to wait till the host institution in your country gets the official mark sheet and certificates from Japan Foundation which would be around 2nd week of September I think.
atreya Wrote:I'm kinda ignorant about JLPT questions, but you work as a professional translator and interpreter and you got about two third of the listening? I don't get it, please explain.atreya Wrote:Passed N1 on my 5th Attempt!!! やったぞ!I don't have any tips per se. But I can share about how I prepared for the Exam.
Vocab/Grammar: 40/60
Reading : 38/60
Listening : 43/60
Total 121/180
Same as erlog
I work as a professional translator and interpreter, so the Listening section wasn't a big problem to begin with as I was doing a lot of that at work and listening to podcasts and online radio apart from that. All I did was practice a few mock tests on the listening section before the exam. As for Kanji, Vocab, I never really memorized any word lists, I just made sure to memorize whatever new vocab that I came across while reading online newspapers, while doing translation of company e-mails etc. Reading comprehension was where I really sucked, so I made sure to practice a lot of mock tests to improve my reading speed and of course I took some online classes as well. Yea I guess that's about it. Hope that helped.
atreya Wrote:@undead_saifThat's why I wrote "I'm kinda ignorant about JLPT questions". Thanks for the reply!
What do you want me to explain about exactly? You do know how the marking system has changed for the new pattern right? You may get 60/60 even after making a mistake or get 45/60 for just making 2 mistakes. You should read up about Item Response Theory.
For the record, I got 60/60 in the listening section N1 test I took in July 2011, 40/60 in vocab/grammar, but just 6/60 in reading and failed the test even though I got 106/180.
Besides just because I work as an interpreter/translator doesn't mean I should get a perfect 60/60 in listening. It's a exam, and people make mistakes no matter how good they are!
Zgarbas Wrote:Random question: Are they all using 標準語 with standard accents in the N1 listening? Or do they get special accents and speech types to test you out on that?標準語 all day every day 4 lyfe on JLPT because you'll never ever encounter someone speaking kansai-ben socially, on TV, or on radio or anything. Ya know, except for the part where every TV program basically has one token person with a kansai accent.
. Try having to do listening comprehension on a convo with a Birmingham accent like they do on the English listening exams.TheVinster Wrote:I'm stumped as to whether I should take the N2 or N3. Yes I went to the sites and took the mock test and I feel like I can more or less pass N3 confidently. The N2 mock didn't go all that well but I feel I got the gist of it. Unfortunately I have school starting this week and a part-time job so I'm not sure if I could study as much as I'd want to. The difficulty of this choice is that in Chicago it's only administered in December so if I take N3 and pass it this year then I can't take N2 until next December. To me this is the biggest factor in not wanting to just be satisfied with N3.No. :-( I'm in the same quandary. I think N3 is probably too easy, but I'm wondering whether N2 will be too hard. And if I don't take it this year, it's another year of waiting. I have the kanji + pronunciations (and then some), but am mainly worried about listening and the more obscure grammar points. I should give the practice test a go and see how I fair. I have a few weeks (eek!) left to decide.
Any advice?