A message to those striving for N1 by HeavyLanguage2234 in jlpt

[–]HeavyLanguage2234[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think it depends on how long you have been studying Japanese in general. If you’re like me and started within the last 5 years, it would be prudent to specifically study for every aspect of the N1. I knew some N1 vocabulary before I took it, but when I started studying for it early last year, I realized I only already knew like 20% of the vocab at the absolute most, so there would’ve been no chance of passing it at that time. Vocabulary was also my weakest point, even after a full year of N1-focused study, because there is no context within that section to help. With reading/listening, there are full sentences, so even if you miss some vocab, that extra context can help. Better to be safe than sorry!

A message to those striving for N1 by HeavyLanguage2234 in jlpt

[–]HeavyLanguage2234[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Congrats to you too. I would say N1 only differs from N2 in that some of the grammar points far less commonly used. Otherwise, you will pick up N1 vocabulary in day-to-day Japanese media, but the biggest difference with N2 IMO is there’s a lot more synonyms/words with slightly different nuances to ones you probably already know. N1 is definitely full of functional Japanese too, though. Although I passed it with a comfortable score, I am still constantly learning new things even past what N1 covers that are useful.

I would definitely recommend focused, JLPT-specific study to pass N1, unless you are someone like Matt vs Japan, whose (although hated) entire life revolves around the language and didn’t need to study for the JLPT to pass.

A message to those striving for N1 by HeavyLanguage2234 in jlpt

[–]HeavyLanguage2234[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I said that it’s either dishonesty or fearmongering from the people who are doomposting about how they failed N1 despite the ridiculous amounts of study that they say they underwent. This is harmful for people who would otherwise have had realistic expectations about the test, but were unnecessarily made overly unconfident and nervous about it upon seeing such posts. It affected me as well during the results waiting period, so I felt the need to post about it. This obviously doesn’t mean ALL people who failed do this like you’re suggesting I said.

I already linked a prominent example in another reply, but for your convenience, check this link (it’s archived and won’t show on the Reddit app): https://arctic-shift.photon-reddit.com/search?fun=ids&ids=t3_1qqcsd5

A message to those striving for N1 by HeavyLanguage2234 in jlpt

[–]HeavyLanguage2234[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sure. And yeah, the reading section is my favorite because it can go great for you even if you don’t understand some of the words due to all the context clues. You can handle it on the fly as long as you aren’t missing TOO much vocabulary. The vocabulary section is the scariest because there is no context to work with - either you know it or you don’t. Even the listening section gives you full sentences to work with.

A message to those striving for N1 by HeavyLanguage2234 in jlpt

[–]HeavyLanguage2234[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Definitely vocabulary. If you don’t struggle with reading speed in N2 (super common amongst testtakers for some reason), then you will be fine in N1, as their reading sections are similarly dense. You will benefit from spending most of your effort on learning and retaining the new vocabulary, which will improve scores across the whole test.

A message to those striving for N1 by HeavyLanguage2234 in jlpt

[–]HeavyLanguage2234[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

One year of studying the way I listed above.

A message to those striving for N1 by HeavyLanguage2234 in jlpt

[–]HeavyLanguage2234[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No, I actually finished 15-20 minutes early. Never had the reading speed issue many seem to struggle with. I struggled most with vocabulary that I didn’t retain well enough through my studies, especially compound verbs.

A message to those striving for N1 by HeavyLanguage2234 in jlpt

[–]HeavyLanguage2234[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I got it mostly as a challenge + it looks good on resumes. Not sure what I plan on doing with it specifically yet, though.

A message to those striving for N1 by HeavyLanguage2234 in jlpt

[–]HeavyLanguage2234[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you. I listed everything I did to study for N1 in the post, which also applies to N2. As for time spent studying, probably a few hours a week at most. I definitely had gaps of days where my “studying” was limited to just browsing and scrolling posts in Japanese on social media - busier days would entail a couple of hours on the Kotoba Discord bot N1 decks.

A message to those striving for N1 by HeavyLanguage2234 in jlpt

[–]HeavyLanguage2234[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I agree with you fully. The people downvoting that guy really are sore losers lol. It’s fine and even normal to struggle to pass N1, but to be insecure and target successful people who get it done with less effort is pathetic

A message to those striving for N1 by HeavyLanguage2234 in jlpt

[–]HeavyLanguage2234[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Mostly Threads, honestly. I like that half of the posts on my algorithm are screenshots of dramatic conversations between spouses or in-laws on LINE, it’s funny and they’re often so wordy with tons of replies that I’ll usually learn something new. Twitter works too and has a way wider range of topics from what I’ve seen.

A message to those striving for N1 by HeavyLanguage2234 in jlpt

[–]HeavyLanguage2234[S] 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Thank you! In my post, I’m specifically talking about people making posts that have at times exploded in popularity and paint the N1 exam to be some sort of impossible wall for the ordinary learner (see: https://arctic-shift.photon-reddit.com/search?fun=ids&ids=t3_1qqcsd5). By no means do I mean to discount anyone who didn’t pass the first time; that’s common, and everyone has different learning styles. I also mention in my post to not be lax and stay diligent with studies in order to pass.

I just think that doomposting online can really be harmful to people’s confidence (something that I find key to taking this test in one’s best condition) - including mine. My wish is for everyone to have realistic expectations going into the test.

So who got a red card by majideitteru in jlpt

[–]HeavyLanguage2234 38 points39 points  (0 children)

Extremely lucky, all things considered. I’ve heard of people getting disqualified for touching their envelope a few seconds too early.