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-   -   I want to live in japan but I'm scared! (https://www.japanforum.com/forum/living-japan/5716-i-want-live-japan-but-im-scared.html)

Bugg333 03-10-2009 03:51 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Hatredcopter (Post 168592)
When you get to high school you have to make sure and get good grades so you can go to a good university - one that has Japanese language classes, preferably.

I'm a mixed guy (1/2 black 1/2 white) in 10th Grade and i want to live in Japan as well. I am learning Japanese from books and whatever source i can get my hands on. I am 16 years old and I live in LA, Cali, USA. (the place where there are two seasons every year... Summer and Spring. :rolleyes: ) I have always loved the Asian cultures and for many of years i have always loved the Japanese culture especially. So understanding the culture and history of Japan will never be a problem for me.

However, my concern is the grades. My parents have always kept on me about the grades and i have always been good about it, however i don't see how getting a 3.8 is possible... REALLY THOUGH. I get pissed when i get any C's on my report card, and my most recent report card had about a 3.3 average, with 3 A's, 3 B's and 1 C. (I play music too and im in a music academy, so i have 7 periods.) With a 3.3, am i going to be ok? I'm worried out of my mind dawg!!!! :eek:

And what other necessities are there? Tell me now so i can prepare as much as possible. What colleges are there that are near or in a city, and what GPA is necessary for which ones? And also, what cards/papers do i have to fill to go over there to learn, and after that, what would i have to get to live there after college? What range of jobs would be available?

Thanks :vsign:

burkhartdesu 03-10-2009 04:06 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by forgotenmemory (Post 168507)
I'm scared about maving to japan because of the rascism and I don't really like the sexism eitHER!:mad:

Okay- I'm not going to read all the replies, but this person clearly needs to educate themselves.

dougbrowne 03-10-2009 04:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by forgotenmemory (Post 168517)
Well I'm american/hispanic and my family isn't from mexico! darn...and I'm also scared because of the food I don't eat rice or fish...

Honestly, if you ever do want to live in japan, you better get a taste for sushi (rice and fish). If your serious, then you should try and eat more of it, studies actually show that once you eat something that you don't like around 15 times, you usually start to take a liking too it, so try it, it's actually very tasty.

EDIT: wow, I really should have looked at how many pages there are in this thread before I posted... oops..

burkhartdesu 03-10-2009 04:18 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dougbrowne (Post 682685)
Honestly, if you ever do want to live in japan, you better get a taste for sushi (rice and fish). If your serious, then you should try and eat more of it, studies actually show that once you eat something that you don't like around 15 times, you usually start to take a liking too it, so try it, it's actually very tasty.

EDIT: wow, I really should have looked at how many pages there are in this thread before I posted... oops..

Even though having a taste for fish isn't a bad idea, eating sushi isn't necessary. From my experience Japanese people only eat it rarely, it's kind of a stereotype to assume that it's a staple of their diet.

But rice, you should definitely get used to.

SSJup81 03-10-2009 05:45 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bugg333 (Post 682678)
I'm a mixed guy (1/2 black 1/2 white) in 10th Grade and i want to live in Japan as well. I am learning Japanese from books and whatever source i can get my hands on. I am 16 years old and I live in LA, Cali, USA. (the place where there are two seasons every year... Summer and Spring. :rolleyes: ) I have always loved the Asian cultures and for many of years i have always loved the Japanese culture especially. So understanding the culture and history of Japan will never be a problem for me.

You're already on the right track, studying the language and the culture.:cool:
Quote:

However, my concern is the grades. My parents have always kept on me about the grades and i have always been good about it, however i don't see how getting a 3.8 is possible... REALLY THOUGH. I get pissed when i get any C's on my report card, and my most recent report card had about a 3.3 average, with 3 A's, 3 B's and 1 C. (I play music too and im in a music academy, so i have 7 periods.) With a 3.3, am i going to be ok? I'm worried out of my mind dawg!!!! :eek:
You should be fine.
Quote:

And what other necessities are there? Tell me now so i can prepare as much as possible. What colleges are there that are near or in a city, and what GPA is necessary for which ones? And also, what cards/papers do i have to fill to go over there to learn, and after that, what would i have to get to live there after college? What range of jobs would be available?
Well, once you graduate high school, look into universities that have exchange programs. It wouldn't surprise me if a place like UCLA had it. You can maybe minor in Japanese and then participate in an exchange where you can maybe spend a semester in Japan while studying. To go to an actual Japanese University, the way you're going on about it, you have to have a Japanese proficiency level of probably equivalent to the JLPT 1. Do you have any idea what your proficiency level is? Have you ever looked into taking the Japanese Language Proficiency Test (JLPT)?

Aside from having a passport, to literally live there, you will need a Visa. There are different types, work visa, spousal visa, student visa, tourist visa, etc. There are requirements as to how you get the visa, but one of the main necessities is having a Bachelor's degree from an accredited college/university.

Anyway, do you plan on literally living there or do you just want to visit for a like a month or something? If you literally want to live there, would probably have to try and obtain a work visa, which isn't easy to obtain, seemingly. You have to already have a job and a place of employment to sponsor your Visa prior to living there.

Esteban 03-10-2009 08:28 PM

Hmm, yea right.
 
You're 12 years old, and says that you've tried learning Japanese for a long time (which I doubt.) Learning a new language requires a lot of consentration, interest and will, with all these qualifications you will learn fast. But still, Japanese takes many years to master. You are 12, how can you possibly be thinking of living in Japan, what are your reasons? You obviously have no interest in learning the language as good as you can. To me it seems like you think you'll be done learning a language in 1 day.

Grow up, get the qualifications mentioned above and maybe then you can think of living in Japan.


I know this, I can speak French, English and Norwegian. French took me 6 years to manage to speak almost fluently. I started learning when I was 9.

LOL, you don't eat rice? Shame. Then I don't think you should go there. (What did you think? There's all kinds of food in Japan.)

Bugg333 03-11-2009 12:11 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SSJup81 (Post 682699)
Well, once you graduate high school, look into universities that have exchange programs. It wouldn't surprise me if a place like UCLA had it. You can maybe minor in Japanese and then participate in an exchange where you can maybe spend a semester in Japan while studying. To go to an actual Japanese University, the way you're going on about it, you have to have a Japanese proficiency level of probably equivalent to the JLPT 1. Do you have any idea what your proficiency level is? Have you ever looked into taking the Japanese Language Proficiency Test (JLPT)?

Well i only recently got a book, which im starting to learn japanese from. Will I probably be able to pass this JLPT if i study japanese language for the next two years that i'm in high school? I want to actually GO to a university in Japan, not just a semester, i mean GO. I want to BE in it.
Quote:

Originally Posted by SSJup81 (Post 682699)
Aside from having a passport, to literally live there, you will need a Visa. There are different types, work visa, spousal visa, student visa, tourist visa, etc. There are requirements as to how you get the visa, but one of the main necessities is having a Bachelor's degree from an accredited college/university.

Well first of all, how can i get a Bachelor's degree if i plan on learning in a university in japan? I would have to get a student visa to go over there to be in a Japanese university, obviously, but i can't get the visa without the degree, so am i forced to have to take college in here in america before i can even try to learn in Japan? I wanna make this work.
Quote:

Originally Posted by SSJup81 (Post 682699)
Anyway, do you plan on literally living there or do you just want to visit for a like a month or something? If you literally want to live there, would probably have to try and obtain a work visa, which isn't easy to obtain, seemingly. You have to already have a job and a place of employment to sponsor your Visa prior to living there.

Yes i plan on living there, i've put much much much much thought into it, and if i could choose any place to live, honestly, i'd want to live over there, and i'm confident that i'm not making the wrong choice. Also, i have alot of time to take care of whatever i need to get done before going over there. So i'm also confident that my goal of living there isn't an impossible one.
now for the work visa, if im going to learn over there, in one of their universities, will i need a work visa or a student visa? I thought i could get a student visa and then get a work visa when i graduate. and if i do that, i guess i'll have to get a job while im in the university, so that i can get the work visa? :confused: wouldn't i need a work visa for that though?

and lastly, this is indeed a possible goal, right?

SSJup81 03-11-2009 03:51 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bugg333 (Post 682883)
Well i only recently got a book, which im starting to learn japanese from. Will I probably be able to pass this JLPT if i study japanese language for the next two years that i'm in high school? I want to actually GO to a university in Japan, not just a semester, i mean GO. I want to BE in it.

I actually doubt that you will be able to pass lvl 1 or 2, unless you have a really good memory and use Japanese every single solitary day in some way or form and associate with those who can speak it back as practice. In other words, maybe if you eat, sleep, and breathe Japanese, maybe you'll be able to reach that level, although I highly doubt that one possibly can in only two years with out being surrounded by it (but hey, everyone learns differently). I can see learning a lot and then continuing to improve upon it after going to Japan.

In the states, the JLPT is given in December every year at various test centers. The price varies depending on what level you take. I took lvl 3 this past December, but didn't pass it due to pretty much doing horribly on the first section. There are four levels for the JLPT, 4 being the easiest, 1, being the hardest. A person with a lvl 1 proficiency, "has mastered grammar to a high level, knows around 2,000 kanji and 10,000 words, and has an integrated command of the language sufficient for life in Japanese society." A person on this level, or higher, should be able to read, and probably comprehend, a Japanese newspaper and should be able to hold a conversation with practically strangers on the street. The best way to even be remotely close to this, imo, is to actually be emerged in the language.

A friend of mine studied Japanese for years...I'd say ever since he was about 12 or 13. He was great with reading, writing, and vocabulary, but due to the fact that he didn't have any formal learning until he did get to college, his speaking/listening wasn't very good at all. All his years of self-study did pay off when taking formal Japanese classes at his university. He then spent about a year in Japan as an exchange through his university during his third year.
Quote:

Well first of all, how can i get a Bachelor's degree if i plan on learning in a university in japan? I would have to get a student visa to go over there to be in a Japanese university, obviously, but i can't get the visa without the degree, so am i forced to have to take college in here in america before i can even try to learn in Japan? I wanna make this work.
It'd be cheaper and more practical to just study in your home country and just do a cultural exchange. If you go to a university in Japan, your lessons will be in Japanese. I know some places offer English-language classes, like Hokusei Gakuen University in Sapporo, but, it's set up for "exchange" purposes.
Quote:

Yes i plan on living there, i've put much much much much thought into it, and if i could choose any place to live, honestly, i'd want to live over there, and i'm confident that i'm not making the wrong choice. Also, i have alot of time to take care of whatever i need to get done before going over there. So i'm also confident that my goal of living there isn't an impossible one.
It isn't, but it'd still be more practical, and realistic, if you just study in your home country and do an exchange, and then return to Japan after you've graduated.
Quote:

now for the work visa, if im going to learn over there, in one of their universities, will i need a work visa or a student visa? I thought i could get a student visa and then get a work visa when i graduate. and if i do that, i guess i'll have to get a job while im in the university, so that i can get the work visa? :confused: wouldn't i need a work visa for that though?
Probably a student visa, but I'm not sure of the rules for a foreigner at a university obtaining a job. Maybe someone else can answer this one.
Quote:

and lastly, this is indeed a possible goal, right?
Sure, just a very difficult one due to lack of fluency in the language.

Bugg333 03-11-2009 06:35 AM

So let me get this straight, to learn to language to the necessary point, i would have to basically live over there, but to live over there, i'd have to know the language to the necessary point.

...so i should.... visit japan a bunch of times/be an exchange student, to live over there. something tells me i'm doing something wrong here..... but that's the basic concept that i'm supposed to be understanding, correct?

SSJup81 03-11-2009 06:44 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bugg333 (Post 683025)
So let me get this straight, to learn to language to the necessary point, i would have to basically live over there, but to live over there, i'd have to know the language to the necessary point.

If you want to attend a Japanese University, in the way you're talking, of course you'll have to know the language to the point of an actual native speaker. All of your lectures and classes would be in Japanese. Lectures in English are boring at times; being lectured in a language you're not fluent in, would make it even more difficult to keep up and understand the subject.
Quote:

...so i should.... visit japan a bunch of times/be an exchange student, to live over there. something tells me i'm doing something wrong here..... but that's the basic concept that i'm supposed to be understanding, correct?
Pretty much. I'm just saying, it'd be easier and more practical to minor in something like Japanese, at a university in your own country, and just do a cultural exchange where you'd end up staying with a host family or a program where you can study in Japan for a while. Usually included with this, is an actual class where you're studying the language as well, and since you'd be there on an exchange, of course the benefit of the doubt would be given, and you'd probably have some classes with English language instruction. If you went to a four-year University in Japan on the get-go, you'd have to have a proficiency level of a native speaker. The JLPT 1 is equivalent to 900 hours of study. You'd also have to get through the exam to get into the university.

You could always go back to Japan later on in life, after University to look for a job. I wouldn't mind living in Japan for a bit, which is why I'm applying to the JET Program. Didn't get in this year, so here's hoping I get in next year. Anyway, if you do an exchange, at least you'd get an idea as to whether or not you actually would like to stay in the country for a more permanent basis.

You live in LA, I'm almost positive that places like UCLA would offer an exchange. The only problem is that most schools require one to be in his/her third year of university before doing an exchange.


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