12 lessons · -
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- · April, July, October入学
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9 months (July to March) · July入学
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¥670,000
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Held every year in July · July入学
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1 to 2 years · April, July, October, January入学
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18 years of age or older, 12 years of formal education or equivalent, illustrate serious intention to study and recognize the curriculum to be appropriate to their aim, enter Japan with the permission of the Japanese Immigration Service, have a trustworthy financial supporter, be able to submit all proscribed documents, be physically fit and be able to use school facilities and attend classes without any special assistance
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Hi everyone, I’m from India and planning to study Japanese in Japan. I’ve completed JLPT N5 and my goal is to reach N1, get a job, and build my career there. I was initially planning for Unitas, but I found out that the seats are already filled, so now I’m looking for other good options. I’m mainly looking for: - Affordable fees and living cost - Good teaching quality - Part-time job opportunities - Some support for jobs after studies I also prefer a place where living is manageable for a student (not too expensive or high pressure). If anyone can suggest good schools or guide me on how to choose the right one, it would really help. Also, are smaller cities better than Tokyo for students like me? Any honest advice or recommendations would be greatly appreciated 🙏 Thanks in advance!
Hi everyone, I’m from India and planning to study Japanese in Japan. I’ve completed JLPT N5 and my goal is to reach N1, get a job, and build my career there. I was initially planning for Unitas, but I found out that the seats are already filled, so now I’m looking for other good options. I’m mainly looking for: - Affordable fees and living cost - Good teaching quality - Part-time job opportunities - Some support for jobs after studies I also prefer a place where living is manageable for a student (not too expensive or high pressure). If anyone can suggest good schools or guide me on how to choose the right one, it would really help. Also, are smaller cities better than Tokyo for students like me? Any honest advice or recommendations would be greatly appreciated 🙏 Thanks in advance!
My background as follows: 26, with a CPA license in my own country, and experience within the banking industry. Been studying Japanese on the side for years now. My question is, is it career suicide for me to leave this job and go to Japan as a language school student? Or should it be better just to learn language on the side.
I’m in the process of applying to a language school for the October 2026 intake, and I’ve submitted my documents and so far so good. I’m thinking about quitting or changing my job before or during the COE process. The work is getting really hard to deal with, but I’m worried it could cause issues with the application. I’m self-funded from Canada and have enough savings, so finances aren’t the problem. I’m just not sure if changing job would affect my application. Not sure if it would make my application "high risk" or something. I’m also probably going to find a part time job in the meantime (so I can actually have time to study).
Hello, has anyone here gone to a language school with taking the BJT as a goal and would be willing to share their experiences/recommendations? I'm planning to take JLPT N3 in my home country in 2027 and move to Japan for language school (12-18 months) in 2028/2029, depending on savings. My goal is to score as high as possible on the BJT by the end of school, ideally hitting J1 territory. I've been looking at the Nisshinkyo recommendations + websites and so far, my shortlist consists of: * Communica in Kobe (due to them starting business classes from N3 already) * KJLS in Kyoto (seem to have small classes and balanced student demographics) * KAI in Tokyo (I've heard good things about their kanji teaching methods for western students) Would appreciate any thoughts on either those schools or others that I should check out (or general advise)
Next month I’ll be visiting several places in Japan with the goal of checking out different language schools. I’ve been researching options in Tokyo, Chiba, Shizuoka, Hamamatsu, and Nagoya so I can get a feel for a variety of locations and school environments. I should preface by saying that ideally I'd like to land a school somehwhere outside of Tokyo so that rent/bills are more managable, I also have a fondness for Shizuoka. One thing I’ve noticed is that many schools (especially outside Tokyo) seem to have very distinct student demographics, with virtually 0% western students. Sometimes hundreds of students made up mostly of just one or two countries. As a white english speaking person, I sometimes wonder how well I would fit in socially at a school where I might be the only person from my background. I don’t mean this in a negative way toward anyone, but I do think about whether I’d find it easy to connect with others or if these types of schools would even be able to support me in getting set up in Japan as an English speaker. When I contacted one school in Shizuoka, they mentioned that in their 20+ year history they’ve never had a British student, and that they haven’t really supported students who speak English before. That left me feeling a bit puzzled about why no other Western students seem to choose this school. I come from a country with a very mixed demographic, so diversity itself isn’t an issue for me, but I do worry about whether I might feel isolated or unsupported because of my nationality or language background. My main goal is to take the risk and learn as much of the language as I can during my two years, but I wanted to ask if anyone here has experience attending a language school in Japan and **what factors I should keep in mind when choosing the best possible school. What helped you decide on the right school for you?** Is student demographic something I really need to consider, or is it mostly irrelevant in the long run?