GZGQ.COM
welcome to my space
X
Search:  
 HOME   Time to become fluent
Time to become fluent
Published by: anonym 2009-01-08
Welcome to:gzgq.com

  • Hi,

    I'd really love to become "fluent", or at least at the level of the average Japanese high school graduate. So, I could translate anime/manga, watch movies, listen to radio, read Japanese literature, get a job in Japan, and communicate effortlessly (not fumbling to form sentences or recall vocab, etc).

    Anyways I have 3 questions:

    1. Assuming you took 1 Japanese college course per semester, how long would it take to gain fluency?

    2. Say it takes 3 years to achieve JLPT 1 (i.e. 6 college semesters), then how much longer would it require to reach fluency?

    3. How many vocab words do you suppose an educated Japanese person might know? I'm guessing something like 20,000... As far as Kanji goes, I imagine it'd be something like 3,000 so that's what I'm aiming for.

    Thanks very much! Any input would really be appreciated.

    Raj


  • I would say, good or bad, that about 500 Kanji is the average ammount a casual Japanese youth knows these days. I'm just basing this on my own friends... I haven't done a JD Powers & Associates review....


  • The further from Tokyo the better.

    i have plans to go to waseda to study japanese over there?? good idea??

    Good thing is I do have some friends who live there, i met a lot of them in my computer animation classes. Anyways, they told me just to e-mail them and we can go out or something, or they can help me with japanese. ^_^


  • Just be patient, and things will come!

    I've only taken 1 year of college level Japanese, but I've been living here in Japan for nearly 3 years now and studying on and off on my own. I hope to pass level 2 of JLPT this year, but I'm still having a hard time with the practice tests. If I can give you any advice, it's don't give up and be persistant. Things will come with time.

    According to a navy friend I have the standard for native level usually comes after living in that country for 7 years.


  • First: Mike -- you change avatars more than some people change bed partners. I do like your current one though.

    Second: Six months? A prodigy maybe, but most of my friends in Japan are in the 5+ year club... many in the 10+ and a few in the 20+. None of them speak close to native, but they are all fluent. I'm going to guess that that's the norm.

    Third: Elizabeth brings up a good point which should probably go into another thread, but... does anyone think the current toys will help or deter people learning. (Not just the internet radio thing, which is actually a good idea.) As I'm the ripe old age of 30, I looked up all my kanji in the Nelson for my first 5 years of study. I had to go out of my way to the special lab on campus (one of the biggest campuses in the US mind you) that had Japnaese enabled computers (and they were Macs!). I don't know... no doubt looking up words is now much quicker, but do they stick is the question.


  • Well, first it depends on your definition of fluent. What Nosferatu is pretty much head on for the standard definition of "fluent" which I personally think is very low. (IE, you probably wouldn't be able to interpret at a high level, but can live your life on your own in Japan). I lived in Japan for 7 years and still had troubles with certain topics. The news and newspapers, are particularly difficult to understand 100%, whereas 70-80% is pretty attainaible.

    6 college semesters is nowhere near JLPT 1... in most cases, just barely able to pass 3 really.

    Langauges are weird. Some people catch them, some don't. I can really only comment on my own experiences, and those I've witnessed. For me:

    -3 years in university (this was over 24 credit hours though mind you -- my 3rd year I took two courses per semester)
    -3 months in an exchange trip. This is where you would 'double-up' so to speak. I took 3 courses, and studied about 3-4 hours a day
    -Back in university, I finished all the normal classes so did private study and turned work into a professor.
    -1 year in Japan, self-studying (I had a job at this point) and I was able to pass JLPT 2. Some year or so after this is when you start feeling fluent, although Japanese people will tell you after 2 years of university that you "speak great Japanese."
    ELT World Discussion :: View topic - When does an advanced learner ::
    7 posts - Last post: Oct 12, 2008This has been a question on my mind for some time. Can one become fluent without ever living and working in an English-speaking
    http://eltworld.net/forums/viewtopic.php?t=1426&sid=a0c259df9d1dcf7580386aa3d11a95d6
    HOME

    Note that to pass Level 1, you will need to be able to read Japanese like you read English. Pick something up, read it and digest about 80% of it (tiny details included) in one pass. Get the other 20% or so in the 2nd pass. This is very hard - by far the hardest part on the test, and the grammar is sick as well.

    As before, it's different per person. To be honest, I think the biggest variable is how you spend your time in Japan. You can really excellerate, but it doesn't happen by accident. I spent a lot of weekends locked away in my room.


  • The only way to become fluent in any language is to first study it to the point where you are comfortable reading the language and holding a conversation with the language.
    Promising Practices Fluency: Helping Your Child Read and Understand::
    File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - View as HTMLwants to, allow your child to re-read his favorite book one. more time. It may not be interesting to you, but it is helping. your child become fluent.
    http://www.fape.org/pubs/fape-37.pdf
    HOME

    To sum up an answer for you first two questions: You'd have to live there to become fluent. Two or three years (not class-years, 365 day years) of study and about one year living there to be 100% fluent.

    To answer question #3, there are some 1,900 + Kanji recognized as official by the Japanese government, and an excess of 2,000 used by the media/people. How many total vocab "words" will you need to know? Japanese isn't like English or Spanish or any roman-based system. One character can mean several words, add a new character in front of or behind the first character and you've got a new batch of meanings. For example:
    Ni (に) can mean red earth, two, baggage/cargo, etc. I hope you catch my drift~


  • 1. Assuming you took 1 Japanese college course per semester, how long would it take to gain fluency?

    Do you mean intensive course ? How many hours a week ?

    2. Say it takes 3 years to achieve JLPT 1 (i.e. 6 college semesters), then how much longer would it require to reach fluency?

    Starting from zero, it took me less than about 2 years to reach the JLPT2 without taking lessons (well, just 4 months to get the basic grammar and vocabulary at the beginning) nor studying (just by checking words and kanji I wanted to know with my dictionary and listenning to people in Japan). I don't have much time or motivation to learn more now, but if I had only that to do, I could certainly reach JLPT1 within a 6 months or 1 year.

    3. How many vocab words do you suppose an educated Japanese person might know? I'm guessing something like 20,000... As far as Kanji goes, I imagine it'd be something like 3,000 so that's what I'm aiming for.

    I'd say the same.


  • Well, I can tell you that if you moved to Japan after high school, then native will never come. This is true for pretty much most langauges. If you don't start early enough, you'll never get the accent. A shame the way our brain works. :(now there's a difference between fluency and accent .I'm very good at accents..iow talk with an accent(exept american, I wonder why :S) My friends from Japan say my accent is very good, almost fooled them to think I was japanese...but I'm not fluent enough to pull the trick :) It's great to fool people with a different accent...they never know :giggle:


  • That's the biggest load of crap I've heard all week.

    It remains one of the largest loads I've heard in my entire life.


  • If you live in Japan it makes a big difference, as you're constantly being bombarded by the language. TV, radio, signs, conversations of people around you, and you're forced to speak it as well. It's almost like you're spending a large amount of your waking hours studying, even if you don't sit down at a desk with a book.

    If you're taking Japanese while living in your home country, you don't have any of those advantages.

    Outside of Japan, JLPT L2 is roughly the level you'll be at if you get a bachelor's degree in Japanese language at a decent university.


  • Starting from zero, it took me less than about 2 years to reach the JLPT2 without taking lessons

    Wow, that's pretty good :cool:

    Do you mean intensive course ? How many hours a week ?

    Err, good question..... I don't know how many hours exactly, I guess whatever pace is necessary to cover the "Genki" textbook in 2 semesters. (volume I and II)

    I've assumed a college student studying Japanese sits in class for 5 hours per week, then studies for an additional 10 hours outside of class (assuming he/she is a good student and does the homework!)... A semester is something like 14 weeks, round that up to 15, for a total of 15*15 = 225 hours of study per semester = 450 hours of study per year. (Fall semester + spring semester)

    Then, I figure if I study for 75 minutes per day (=1.25 hours), then in 365 days, that's 365*1.25 = 456 hours of study. So, basically every year, I'm trying to complete the equivalent of 2 college semesters of work. So maybe in 6 years or so, I'll be more or less fluent, perhaps around the level of someone who majored in Japanese in college... If I decide to move at Japan at that point, I'd probably keep up studying but probably not so seriously since I'd be speaking it every day anyways.

    Thanks again!


  • Actually, yukio_neko^_o, the amount of Kanji necessary to so much as read a newspaper is 1,945 (+ or - a few, I'm hazy on the correct number). 500 is equivalant to Kindergarten/young childrens books. :relief: However, some media outlets include the furigana, which is the breakdown of Kanji into Hirigana above the word in Ruby-colored letters.


  • Hey man, no need to get your panties in a wad. Just passin' on what I heard. I've also heard that Janet Jackson is a man, but I doubt that's true.

    :balloon:

    -----------------------------------
    edit*

    I'll ask my amigo for more details just for the hell of it. I should also add that I think he implied living and studying the language during that time period. I'll be clearer next time.


  • Starting from zero, it took me less than about 2 years to reach the JLPT2 without taking lessons
    Wow, that's pretty good

    Maciamo -- that's 2 years of intensive studying in Japan, right?

    As m477 stated, being in Japan is like being on steroids. 2 years studying in the US is like 2 months of studying intensively in Japan. The further from Tokyo the better. :)


  • rajs20,

    There are some people who become near-fluent after living in Japan for six months, but they are the exception. I always tell everyone it will take about two years of living in Japan to get to the level you want.
    Two years is what I've heard as well and seen of Japanese students here in the US. My personal experience has been self-study with a tutor off and on for about five years now, a three month homestay/exchange trip two years ago returning back since to see friends/boyfriend five times going on six for 1 week intervals. And am only now beginning to feel completely comfortable with general conversation, picking up 60-70% of general newspaper articles, writing freely without having to look up every third word and form. This next
    excursion should solidify all of these in an extreme way. :relief:

    rajs20 is dead on about the importance of organization (ie courses) and setting attainable goals -- As a first-third year learner, I basically did myself the great disservice of letting an impatience for mastery devestate any semblance of disciplined study habits or realistic expectations by plunging headstrong into advanced materials (ie magazine articles) without first being able to read the ads. :blush:

    Another thing being online helps with is listening -- my pc is tuned to Japanese radio news stations all the time at work and mostly at home. Gives a great feeling of being able to commune with the cultural values and what is going on there -- of course getting to that point of comprehension takes years of study, but if you can't move to Japan immediately it may be the next best thing. And with news stories, you can always use the printed text to connect yourself on any unclear dialogue. Same holds of course with listening aids that complement written passages at any level....highly recommended as a way to solidify your vocabulary and get used to the weird 'machine-gun' pronunciations. :p


  • native level

    Well, I can tell you that if you moved to Japan after high school, then native will never come. This is true for pretty much most langauges. If you don't start early enough, you'll never get the accent. A shame the way our brain works. :(


  • I've been writing on my PC for nearly 20 years that I can no longer remember the strokes correctly, although reading remains OK. I'm afraid to try how many kanji I can handwrite correctly :shiver:

    Yes, I'm pretty sure you can beat those "ko-gals" in Shibuya. :giggle:

    One exception--in the days when X Japan was immensely popular, those "visual-kei" fans responded to a quiz on difficult "kokugo" questions and other academic subjects and became champions!! :emblaugh:


  • According to a navy friend I have the standard for native level usually comes after living in that country for 7 years.

    And according to a lady I worked with at Domino's Pizza in the U.S., there is no need to study a foreign language since spending two months in a country will give you native fluency.

    Let's just say that at the time she told me that, I had spent well over two months in Japan and hadn't achieved native fluency. Let's further say that at the time I read your post I have spent well over 7 years in Japan and have still not achieved native fluency.


  • Wow, this forum is really active :) It's been awhile since I stopped by this site. Thanks for all the helpful replies!

    Well looks like I got my work cut out for me, haha... I didn't realize JLPT was so hard as you guys are saying. They put those numbers out like JLPT 1 = "900 hours of study", and JLPT 4 = "150 hours of study". Well, since JLPT 4 is supposed to be equivalent to 1 semester of Japanese (afaik), I then figured that JLPT 1 is 6 semesters, or 3 years in other words...

    Oh well, thanks again!


  • there is no need to study a foreign language since spending two months in a country will give you native fluency.

    That's the biggest load of crap I've heard all week.


  • Japanese accent is pretty easy though (relative to the other hard parts of the langauge). Maybe only Spanish (besides the rrrr) is the only other one I can think of that English speakers can pick up easy. When I say easy though, it's easy not to butcher. You still have to start easy to make it perfect. "very convincing" is pretty easily attainable me thinks.

    I can only imagine what non-native German speakers sound like. :)


  • I agree it is much more difficult, but for all practical purposes you can get so close no one would know the difference.


  • I'd say high school kids in the mist of their juken exams can probabaly hold their own up 2000 kanji. The girls with the caked on makeup are probably hovering somewhere around 1000. My wife used to tease me if I got something wrong, saying, "コギャルも知らないよ"


  • As a number of people have said- it's a very individual thing. I have the misfortune of being a painfully slow language learner. Despite living in Japan and soaking in the language, despite having Japanese family, colleages and friends- it takes a long long time for most aspects of the language (vocabulary, grammer) to make some sort of sense, and then longer still before I can use them with any confidence in conversation. It's certainly not from lack of trying, but I have a terribly slow ear and that makes everything difficult.


  • rajs20,

    There are some people who become near-fluent after living in Japan for six months, but they are the exception. I always tell everyone it will take about two years of living in Japan to get to the level you want.

    The more you study now, the faster it will go.

    You need to know all the jouyou kanji, and the other specialty kanji in people's names. (Many Japanese people would fail a test on all of the jouyou kanji.) I would not worry about other "semmon" kanji.


  • It remains one of the largest loads I've heard in my entire life.

    I second that.

    Only a prodigy can reach native level proficiency in that short a time!
    http://english.pravda.ru/printed.html?news_id=12166





  • Traditional University or MLM University? You Choose
    15 Questions to Ask Your Software Vendor

    You are looking at:gzgq.com's Time to become fluent, click gzgq.com to home
  • optimizing award and non award travel
  • anniversary gift for my parents
  • it s tough to be true to a hotel chain even if there s a reward
  • is there a program website that will transfer airlines miles to hotel points
  • the value of miles and points a fresh look
  • confession i voluntarily passed up some miles
  • miles are not free
  • what airlines release award seats near departure
  • best ff program for elite and travelling companion
  • trading miles
  • a website that shows how many seats available on any given flight
  • is this worth it companion ticket and possibly 2750 miles for 14 95
  • gift card summary thread
  • these states allow cashing walmart cards for money orders
  •  
  • air miles uk
  • a new record 0 0046 per mile
  • i like to buy 4000 value mileage for customer rewards program
  • star alliance miles
  • it s prpbably unethical and i wouldn t do it but could i
  • using paypal and or ebay to earn extra miles
  • need help in choosing a ff program for a friend
  • uh oh credit cards and gift cards
  • help me place my elite bet properly
  • question re miles and buying a home
  • best ff program credit card for my flying patterns
  • pam asked how can i sell my delta ffm to purchase tickets to shanghai randy replied
  • question about miles and selling your home
  •  Homepage | Add to favorites | Contact us | Exchange links | LOGIN | Site map | 
    Copyright© 2008 gzgq.com        Site made:CFZ