I did my jlpt in Japan as a student though. That was the time I struggle with learning it.
Sounds like a reasonable change
Sort of the dumbest way they could have tackled the problem
Maybe if they bothered offering the JLPT more than once a year outside of Japan it wouldn’t have been a problem to begin with. But what do I know ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
> JEES told The Japan Times that the change was driven by administrative problems linked to overseas applicants using Japanese addresses without permission or submitting invalid phone numbers.
> These made it difficult, and in certain cases, impossible, to deliver test vouchers and official score reports to examinees or to contact them directly.
Japan being Japan about problem solving. Why not simply ask for an _email_ address?
This smells a bit like the first step of tightening regulations. Maybe they need all the spaces they can get for our visa approval testing in the future lol.
Sorry just want to check, are people doing this because they dont have access to JLPT in there country kind of thing? This is my first time hearing about this that someone who is a tourist (assuming there for leisure) purposely taking test while on vacation?
“…the change was driven by administrative problems linked to overseas applicants using Japanese addresses without permission or submitting invalid phone numbers.”
How many times is this gunna be posted?
This has been posted a thousand times over the past week.
I live here. And it sounds reasonable for me. I mean, why would they allow tourists to use addresses?
And you would probably say why don’t just use an e-mail address? Because the certificate is sent to an actual address. Why not allow overseas address? because they would need to pay more expensive fees and do more for that, why don’t the tourists just go home and take the JLPT in their home country?
JLPT- the best way to spoil a good day off. Winston Churchill said that.
Oh nooooo, whelp at least that horrible loop hole is closed and all those, um, problems? are handled? lol
Test-taking-tourists were a thing?
yahoo japan only, zenkaku, no spaces and of course no weird katakana like the small tsu. also we will know if it is not shift-jis.
oh and, you better have an i-mode browser to register.
ah, your name can only be 13 characters. sorry, not name… full name.
Yes. Kill the language more deader.
Japan is so behind.
Ah yes, the worst type of foreigners: those who study hard and try to learn the language and culture.
Don’t mind the tourists who don’t speak a word and trash communal spaces.
20 comments
[deleted]
no paywall [https://archive.md/6CbVk](https://archive.md/6CbVk)
I did my jlpt in Japan as a student though. That was the time I struggle with learning it.
Sounds like a reasonable change
Sort of the dumbest way they could have tackled the problem
Maybe if they bothered offering the JLPT more than once a year outside of Japan it wouldn’t have been a problem to begin with. But what do I know ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
> JEES told The Japan Times that the change was driven by administrative problems linked to overseas applicants using Japanese addresses without permission or submitting invalid phone numbers.
> These made it difficult, and in certain cases, impossible, to deliver test vouchers and official score reports to examinees or to contact them directly.
Japan being Japan about problem solving. Why not simply ask for an _email_ address?
This smells a bit like the first step of tightening regulations. Maybe they need all the spaces they can get for our visa approval testing in the future lol.
Sorry just want to check, are people doing this because they dont have access to JLPT in there country kind of thing? This is my first time hearing about this that someone who is a tourist (assuming there for leisure) purposely taking test while on vacation?
“…the change was driven by administrative problems linked to overseas applicants using Japanese addresses without permission or submitting invalid phone numbers.”
How many times is this gunna be posted?
This has been posted a thousand times over the past week.
I live here. And it sounds reasonable for me. I mean, why would they allow tourists to use addresses?
And you would probably say why don’t just use an e-mail address? Because the certificate is sent to an actual address. Why not allow overseas address? because they would need to pay more expensive fees and do more for that, why don’t the tourists just go home and take the JLPT in their home country?
JLPT- the best way to spoil a good day off. Winston Churchill said that.
Oh nooooo, whelp at least that horrible loop hole is closed and all those, um, problems? are handled? lol
Test-taking-tourists were a thing?
yahoo japan only, zenkaku, no spaces and of course no weird katakana like the small tsu. also we will know if it is not shift-jis.
oh and, you better have an i-mode browser to register.
ah, your name can only be 13 characters. sorry, not name… full name.
Yes. Kill the language more deader.
Japan is so behind.
Ah yes, the worst type of foreigners: those who study hard and try to learn the language and culture.
Don’t mind the tourists who don’t speak a word and trash communal spaces.
Comments are closed.