TLDR:
Do you guys have recommendations for Japanese language schools in Tokyo/Fukuoka ? Planning to study for 6months-1year. Looked up some schools, but i want to hear your recommendation especially from alumni
My consideration for choosing the language school:
- Focus on conversational skills (in general & business setting)
- Tuition fee & scholarship availability
- I'm from non-english-sepeaking Asian country and not a very social person (more of an introvert i guess), so i'm not sure if schools with more students from Asian country will be better or not (technically might be easier to makes friends, and have speaking practice partner)
Long ver:
Been self-studying since Nov'2022, so it's been 2 years+ now. Passed N4 (Dec'23 — 151/180) & N3 (Jul'24 — 156/180). Took the N2 test (Dec'24), still waiting for result (stumbled hard on reading part, so not sure i will pass or not). Currently studying N1 kanji (i think this is as far as i can go by self-studying)
HOWEVER, i can barely speak Japanese. Some of the reasons i can think of:
- Started out by finishing Busuu's lesson in about 5-6months and since then mainly use textbooks like Minna no Nihongo, Sou-matome (for N3-N2 Kanji), Shinkanzen (for N3 Vocab), TRY! (for N3-N2 Grammar) (also some other books & Anki as supplement), so i mostly only deal with text
- Didn't do much immersion (do watch anime and J-drama from time to time. Also regularly listen to J-pop, if that counts)
- Never practiced my conversation skills. Technically i can try speak to myself, but i refrain to do so because i'm afraid i might be practicing the wrong "発音". Shadowing is an option too that i haven't really try to explore
Basically only input, no output (except doing textbook exercises, JLPT mock tests, and writing Kanji whenever i have the time to help memorize it better, if that counts)
Why self-study:
- I'm working full time & want flexible study hours (my job is not that busy, so i do review my studies whenever i have free time, esp kanji & vocab)
- Didn't want to spend money just to learn basic stuff (N5-N3 level)
- Academically was doing well in school and university, so there's also a bit of ego in me that wants to see how far i can go on my own (my benchmark so far is the JLPT test, even though i know speaking is not part of the exam)
My each aspect evaluation:
- Kanji : have most confidence in. Learnt Mandarin for 7-8 years, which helped a lot when i started learning Kanji (although barely speak Mandarin now)
- Vocab : learnt kanji as a vocab, so they go in pair. Pretty good imo
- Grammar : not that good tbh. Also my least favorite part to study. I feel like grammar should be studied by practicing conversation or writing essay/passages
- Reading : okay-ish side i suppose. Still feel daunting every time i need to read stuff in Japanese
- Listening : not that great
- Writing : i don't think i've ever write/compose a single passage in Japanese
I feel like everything i've learn this far is just memory game. If i stop reviewing my notes, i will quickly forget what i've learnt, especially because i'm not really using it in real life.
Reason to Study Japanese:
- Wanted to attend graduate school (not very sure now)
- Want to work in japan or do japan-related business in my country
- Want to travel and navigate japan without the language barrier
- Do plan to stay on japan long term, depending on how things go
Why Tokyo/Fukuoka:
- Tokyo is the capital of Japan, so naturally, there are more career/business opportunities as well as entertainment
- Fukuoka is on the warmer side of Japan, and i prefer warm climates. I also like beaches. It is also still one of the big cities, just more on the chill side, which i quite like too. Living cost also not as high as Tokyo, which can cost around 50% more according from my rough estimate & calculation
Why language school now:
- By self-studying while working full time until now, i can saved up some money in preparation (i do plan to look for scholarship later on. Saved up money just in case)
- I think now is the moment where i can start getting bang for my buck, since i can focus more on the practical and conversational part
- I can spend time outside of school working part-time, practicing my conversation skill instead of sitting down memorizing kanji/vocab. Some people can manage to go to school, practice and working part-time at the same time, which i found very very amazing, but i think its too much for me if i'm just starting out learning japanese from 0.
If you happen to read until all the way down here, Thank You!
by Zleepy99