AmyKyotoPA wrote:Here's the JET Programme webpage on the Language Courses. It has a placement test as well:
http://www.jetprogramme.org/e/course/je ... index.html
I took it, got 95% on test 1, 80% on test 2, and it told me to register in advanced.
AmyKyotoPA wrote:Here's the JET Programme webpage on the Language Courses. It has a placement test as well:
http://www.jetprogramme.org/e/course/je ... index.html
FakeAcceptanceTroll wrote:I took it, got 95% on test 1, 80% on test 2, and it told me to register in advanced.I would place myself at intermediate at best.
FakeAcceptanceTroll wrote:AmyKyotoPA wrote:Here's the JET Programme webpage on the Language Courses. It has a placement test as well:
http://www.jetprogramme.org/e/course/je ... index.html
I took it, got 95% on test 1, 80% on test 2, and it told me to register in advanced.I would place myself at intermediate at best.
DanAkitaPA wrote:I just got my certificate for completion. I have one suggestion for this document.
In Japanese it clearly states what level you have set, but in English it doesn't say anything but you have completed the JET Programme Language Course.
mike2011ca wrote:I think that the Intermediate level book should be written entirely in hiragana and katakana. at least, all examples, vocabulary, and exercises.
Given that you`ll be taking an intermediate course, it only makes sense.
I am taking a course at my local International Center, as well I have taken a course before coming to Japan, and the first thing we did was learn hiragana and katakana. Doing the beginner course here, and going to do intermediate this coming year, I found it reallydistracting to go back to roman letters. And once I had remembered words, I had a hard time recognizing them when written in my dictionary (hiragana-english), or in places around school or restaurants etc.
It takes at most 10 hours of focused study and practice to learn the 40-some hiragana, and the same for katakana. It`s really not much. And since we see it every day all around, most if not all JETs should know it by year 2. And anyone taking intermediate Japanese, anyone who is serious about studying Japanese, MUST absolutely know hiragana and katakana.
I think the advanced book gets rid of roman letters altogether - but I`m not quite at that level yet.
This will make the intermediate course much better!
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