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04-08-2008, 09:28 PM
Yeah actually I'm wanting to do the same thing. I'm giving myself around 3 years to become fairly fluent in Japanese and I'll be taking classes soon. However for some reason I've always seen me moving to Japan as unrealistic and never looked much deeper into it.
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04-08-2008, 11:44 PM
If you're not fluent in Japanese first, it's gonna be pretty rough. I would really make sure you have the language down before trying something like grad school. Another thing about grad school in Japan is that it's typical for people to become a "research student" before being admitted to a graduate program. Usually this lasts one year and as far as I know, it's difficult (impossible?) to enter grad school without doing this.
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04-09-2008, 06:00 AM
there are graduate programs conducted completely in English. My friend and I researched this because he really wanted to do a master but also really wanted to return to Japan asap. He can't read kanji and japanese is limited so i helped him with navigating the Japanese websites.
contrary to what hatredcopter said, you don't need to have done research either. I'm sure there are some that do, but i can tell you many of my Japanese friends that i studied with in Japan are now starting their masters straight after completing their bachelor. but they will require a good GPA, letter of recommendation etc in most cases. Have a search around the universities english websites. |
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04-09-2008, 06:04 AM
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able to speak or write a particular foreign language easily and accurately My ex girlfriend speaks english at a fluent level after living in Australia for two years despite having many friends who she could speak chinese with. she may not have mastered many business terms but then how many average native speakers have a technical grasp of their own language. |
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04-09-2008, 06:13 AM
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04-09-2008, 08:13 AM
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from my own experience studying with Japanese, their classes are hardly the type of classes where students participate highly. having talked to professors at that Japanese university they also said just as much. in fact i would say student participation is generally as low as it can get. Like the international students i know doing a master here they aren't finding it easy but they are capable and i never did say it would be a walk in the park, studying a master in your native tongue shouldn't be either. so yes, with a dictionary definition of fluency you can take part in a masters degree in english, so i can't see it being too different in Japanese. |
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