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Japanese-Language Proficiency Test

The Japanese-Language Proficiency Test (日本語能力試験, Nihongo Nōryoku Shiken), or JLPT, is a standardized criterion-referenced test to evaluate and certify Japanese language proficiency for non-native speakers, covering language knowledge, reading ability, and listening ability.[1] The test is held twice a year in Japan and selected countries (on the first Sunday of July and December), and once a year in other regions (on the first Sunday of December).[2]

Japanese-Language Proficiency Test
AcronymJLPT
TypeLanguage proficiency test
Year started1984
LanguagesJapanese
Websitewww.jlpt.jp

The JLPT consists of five levels.[3] Until 2009, the test had four levels, with 4 being the lowest and 1 being the highest level of certification.[4] JLPT certificates do not expire or become invalid over time.[5]

History

The JLPT was first held in 1984 in response to the growing demand for standardized Japanese language certification.[6] Initially 7,000 people took the test.[7] Until 2003, the JLPT was one of the requirements for foreigners entering Japanese universities. Since 2003, the Examination for Japanese University Admission for International Students (EJU) is used by most universities for this purpose;[8] unlike the JLPT, which is solely a multiple-choice exam, the EJU contains sections which require the examinee to write in Japanese.

Statistics

In 2004, the JLPT was offered in 40 countries, including Japan. Of the 302,198 examinees in that year, 47% (around 140,000) were certified for their respective levels.[9] The number of candidates continued to rise to 559,056 in 2008, while the percentage of candidates certified has fallen below 36%. In 2009, when a revised system was introduced in which two exams are held each year in East Asia, a total of 768,114 people took the exam.[10] In 2010, 610,000 people took the test.[11] In 2019, 1,168,535 people took the test.[12]

By country

Top 10 countries with the most test takers:

Country Number of examinees (2018, first half)[13]
Japan 195,754
China 118,912
South Korea 41,972
Taiwan 37,804
Vietnam 35,854
Myanmar 16,923
Thailand 14,664
Indonesia 11,868
India 11,707
Philippines 9,572

By city

Top 10 cities with the most test takers:

City or prefecture Country Number of examinees (2018)[13]
Tokyo Japan 49,369
Taipei Taiwan 18,033
Hanoi Vietnam 17,526
Aichi Japan 16,609
Osaka Japan 16,293
Seoul South Korea 15,513
Ho Chi Minh Vietnam 14,909
Yangon Myanmar 14,377
Chiba Japan 13,834
Kanagawa Japan 13,790

Acceptance in Japan

  • Test takers who pass JLPT N1 receive 15 points, and those who pass JLPT N2 receive 10 points under the government's "Point-based Preferential Immigration Treatment System for Highly Skilled Foreign Professionals." Individuals with a total of 70 points or higher receive preferential treatment at immigration.[14]
  • N1 is a prerequisite for foreign medical professionals who wish to take examinations to be licensed in Japan, and for certain foreign nationals who wish to attend nursing school in Japan.[15]
  • Those who have passed either N1 or N2 (regardless of citizenship) are exempt from the Japanese language section of the middle school equivalency examination, which is required to enter a Japanese high school if the applicant did not graduate from a Japanese middle school.[16]
  • N1 is sometimes accepted instead of the Examination for Japanese University Admission for foreign students who wish to study at Japanese universities.
  • One of the requirements for the nurse/caregiver candidates under the EPA. Under the Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA) with Indonesia, the Philippines, and Vietnam, a JLPT certificate is required for Indonesian, Filipino (approximately Level N5 or higher), and Vietnamese (Level N3 or higher) nurse or caregiver candidates who visit Japan.

Administration

International
exam sites[2][17]
East Asia
  South Korea Seoul, Incheon, Suwon, Seongnam, Anyang, Cheonan, Cheongju, Daejeon, Jeonju, Gwangju, Chuncheon, Goyang, Bucheon, Wonju, Busan, Gimhae, Yangsan, Daegu, Gumi, Changwon, Jinju, Ulsan, Pohang, Jeju
  People's Republic of China Beijing, Shanghai, Changchun, Dalian, Guangzhou, Shenyang, Tianjin, Harbin, Xi'an, Chongqing, Jinan, Wuhan, Xiamen, Fuzhou, Hangzhou, Hohhot, Luoyang, Suzhou, Qingdao, Changsha, Chengdu, Nanjing, Hefei, Shenzhen, Nanchang, Shijiazhuang, Taiyuan, Ningbo, Wuxi, Guiyang, Ürümqi
  Hong Kong Hong Kong
  Macau Macau
  Mongolia Ulaanbaatar
  Republic of China Taipei, Kaohsiung, Taichung, Taoyuan
Southeast Asia
  Indonesia Jakarta, Bandung, Surabaya, Medan, Yogyakarta, Padang, Denpasar, Manado, Malang, Semarang, Makassar, Palembang
  Cambodia Phnom Penh, Siem Reap
  Singapore Singapore
  Thailand Bangkok, Chiang Mai, Songkhla, Khon Kaen
  Philippines Manila, Cebu, Davao, Cagayan de Oro
  Brunei Bandar Seri Begawan
  Vietnam Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh, Da Nang, Hue
  Malaysia Kuala Lumpur, Penang, Ipoh, Johor Bahru, Kota Kinabalu
  Myanmar Yangon, Mandalay, Bago
  Laos Vientiane
South and Central Asia
  India New Delhi, Pune, Kolkata, Chennai, Bangalore, Mumbai
  Sri Lanka Colombo
    Nepal Kathmandu
  Pakistan Islamabad, Karachi
  Bangladesh Dhaka
  Uzbekistan Tashkent
  Kazakhstan Almaty
  Kyrgyzstan Bishkek
Oceania
  Australia Canberra, Brisbane, Perth, Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide
  New Zealand Auckland, Wellington, Christchurch
North America
  Canada Vancouver, Toronto, Edmonton
  United States Ann Arbor, Atlanta, Boston, Boulder, Chicago, Columbus, Fayetteville, Honolulu, Houston, Los Angeles, New York, Philadelphia, Seattle, San Francisco, Washington D.C.
  Mexico Mexico City, Monterrey
South America
  Argentina Buenos Aires
  Brazil São Paulo, Londrina, Belém, Rio de Janeiro, Porto Alegre, Brasília, Salvador, Manaus
  Colombia Bogotá
  Ecuador Quito
  Paraguay Asunción
  Uruguay Montevideo
  Venezuela Caracas
  Chile Santiago
  Peru Lima
  Bolivia Santa Cruz, La Paz
Europe
  Italy Rome, Milan, Venice
  United Kingdom London, Edinburgh, Cardiff
  The Netherlands Leiden
  Greece Athens
  Switzerland Bern
  Spain Madrid, Barcelona, Granada, Valencia, Santiago de Compostela, Las Palmas
  Denmark Copenhagen
  Germany Düsseldorf, Stuttgart, Berlin, Hamburg
  Finland Helsinki
  France Paris, Lyon
  Ukraine Kyiv
  Hungary Budapest
  Bulgaria Sofia
  Serbia Belgrade
  Poland Warsaw
  Romania Bucharest
  Ireland Dublin
  Russia Moscow, Vladivostok, Novosibirsk, Khabarovsk, Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk, Irkutsk, Saint Petersburg
  Bulgaria Sofia
  Austria Vienna
Middle East and Africa
  Israel Haifa
  Egypt Cairo
  Kenya Nairobi
  Morocco Rabat
  Madagascar Antananarivo
  South Africa Johannesburg
  Turkey Ankara

In Japan, the JLPT is administered by the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology (MEXT) through the Japan Educational Exchanges and Services (JEES).[18] Overseas, the Japan Foundation co-proctors test administration with local cultural exchange and/or educational institutions, or with committees specially established for this purpose.[19][20]

Test format

The revised test pattern was implemented in 2010. The test consists of five levels: N1, N2, N3, N4, and N5, with N1 being the highest level and N5 the lowest. No Test Content Specification is published as it is discouraged to study from kanji and vocabulary lists.[21]

Level A summary of linguistic competence required for each level
N1 Advanced Level: The ability to understand Japanese used in a variety of circumstances.

Reading

One can read writings with logical complexity and/or abstract writings on a variety of topics, such as newspaper editorials and critiques, and comprehend both their structures and contents. One is also able to read written materials with profound content on various topics and follow their narratives as well as understand the intent of the writers comprehensively.

Listening

One can comprehend orally presented materials such as coherent conversations, news reports, and lectures, spoken at natural speed in a broad variety of settings, and can follow their ideas and comprehend their contents comprehensively. One is also able to understand the details of the presented materials such as the relationships among the people involved, the logical structures, and the essential points.

N2 Pre-Advanced Level: The ability to understand Japanese used in everyday situations, and a variety of circumstances to a certain degree.

Reading

One can read materials written clearly on a variety of topics, such as articles and commentaries in newspapers and magazines as well as simple critiques, and comprehend their contents. One is also able to read written materials on general topics and follow their narratives as well as understand the intent of the writers.

Listening

One can comprehend orally presented materials such as coherent conversations and news reports, spoken at nearly natural speed in everyday situations as well as in a variety of settings, and can follow their ideas and comprehend their contents. One is also able to understand the relationships among the people involved and the essential points of the presented materials.

N3 Intermediate Level: The ability to understand Japanese used in everyday situations to a certain degree.

Reading

One can read and understand written materials with specific contents concerning everyday topics. One is also able to grasp summary information such as newspaper headlines. In addition, one is also able to read slightly difficult writings encountered in everyday situations and understand the main points of the content if some alternative phrases are available to aid one's understanding.

Listening

One can listen and comprehend coherent conversations in everyday situations, spoken at near-natural speed, and is generally able to follow their contents as well as grasp the relationships among the people involved.

N4 Elementary Level: The ability to understand basic Japanese.

Reading

One can read and understand passages on familiar daily topics written in basic vocabulary and kanji.

Listening

One can listen and comprehend conversations encountered in daily life and generally follow their contents, provided that they are spoken slowly.

N5 Basic Level: The ability to understand some basic Japanese.

Reading

One can read and understand typical expressions and sentences written in hiragana, katakana, and basic kanji.

Listening

One can listen and comprehend conversations about topics regularly encountered in daily life and classroom situations and can pick up necessary information from short conversations spoken slowly.

Scoring

Passing is based on scaled scores calculated using item-response theory. Raw scores are not directly used to determine conditions for passing, nor are they reported, except in rough form in the "Reference Information" section.[21] Raw scores are converted to a standard scale, so that equivalent performance on tests from different years and different levels of difficulty yields the same scaled score. The scaled scores are reported, broken down by section, and these are the scores used to determine passing.

In addition, a "Reference Information" section is provided on the report card; this is purely informational – for the examinee's future studies – and is not used in determining if an examinee has passed. The grade given is based on the raw score, and is either A, B, or C, accordingly as the raw score was 67% or above, between 34% and 66%, or below 34%. This reference information is given for vocabulary, grammar, and reading on the N4 and N5, and for vocabulary and grammar (but not reading) on the N1, N2, and N3. In both cases, this breaks down the score on the "Language Knowledge" section into separate skills, but in neither case is performance on the listening section analyzed.

Pass marks

Passing the test requires both achieving an overall pass mark for the total points, and passing each section individually; these are based on the scaled scores. The sectional scores are to ensure that skills are not unbalanced – so one cannot pass by doing well in the reading section but poorly in the listening section, for instance. The overall pass mark depends on the level and varies between 100/180 (55.55%) for the N1 and 80/180 (44.44%) for the N5. The pass marks for individual sections are all 19/60 = 31.67% – equivalently, 38/120 = 19/60 for the large section on the N4 and N5. Note that the sectional pass levels are below the overall pass level, at 31.67% instead of 44.44%–55.55%: one need not achieve the overall pass level on each section. These standards were adopted starting in July 2010, and do not vary from year to year, with the scaling instead varying.

Pass marks for individual sections[22]
Level Overall pass mark Language Knowledge
(Vocabulary/Grammar)
Reading Listening
N1 100 points 19 points 19 points 19 points
N2 90 points 19 points 19 points 19 points
N3 95 points 19 points 19 points 19 points
Total possible 180 points 60 points 60 points 60 points
N4 90 points 38 points 19 points
N5 80 points 38 points 19 points
Total possible 180 points 120 points 60 points

Test sections

Level Test section[23]
(test time)
Total duration
N1 Language Knowledge (Vocabulary/Grammar)・Reading
(110 min)
Listening
(60 min)
170 min
N2 Language Knowledge (Vocabulary/Grammar)・Reading
(105 min)
Listening
(50 min)
155 min
N3 Language Knowledge (Vocabulary)
(30 min)
Language Knowledge (Grammar)・Reading
(70 min)
Listening
(40 min)
140 min
N4 Language Knowledge (Vocabulary)
(25 min)
Language Knowledge (Grammar)・Reading
(55 min)
Listening
(35 min)
115 min
N5 Language Knowledge (Vocabulary)
(20 min)
Language Knowledge (Grammar)・Reading
(40 min)
Listening
(30 min)
90 min
  • Note: "Vocabulary" includes kanji and vocabulary (previous 文字・語彙)

Estimated study time

Study hour comparison data for students residing in Japan, published by the Japanese Language Education Center:

JLPT Study Hour Comparison Data 2010-2015[24]
Level Students with kanji knowledge 

(e.g. speakers of Chinese)

Other students

(no prior kanji knowledge)

N1 1700–2600 hours 3000–4800 hours
N2 1150–1800 hours 1600–2800 hours
N3 700–1100 hours 950–1700 hours
N4 400–700 hours 575–1000 hours
N5 250–450 hours 325–600 hours

Comparison with Common European Framework of Reference for Languages

Although the Japan Foundation has not given any official table of comparison between the CEFR and the JLPT, several Japanese language textbooks[25] and language courses at the university level, based on the competencies required for each level, tend to use the following table of comparison.[26][27]

JLPT and CEFR
JLPT Level CEFR
N1 B2–C1
N2 B1–B2
N3 B1
N4 A2
N5 A1–A2

Older edition

Test content summary (used 2004—2009) Brackets indicate the exact number in the Test Content Specification, 2004 edition.
Level Kanji Vocabulary Listening Hours of Study (estimated) Pass Mark
4 ~100 (103) ~800 (728) Beginner 150 60%
3 ~300 (284) ~1,500 (1409) Basic 300
2 ~1000 (1023) ~6,000 (5035) Intermediate 600
1 ~2000 (1926) ~10,000 (8009) Advanced 900 70%

Applications and results

The application period is usually around early March until late April for July's examination and around early August until late September for December's exam.

Results for the December test are announced the following February for examinees in Japan, and March for overseas candidates. Test results are sent to the examinees through the testing organization or center to which they applied.[28] From 2012, with online registration, results are available online before they are mailed out (late August for the July test). All examinees receive a report indicating their scores by section. Those who pass also receive a Certificate of Proficiency.

Year Level JLPT in Japan JLPT overseas
Applicants Examinees Certified (%) Applicants Examinees Certified (%)
2007[29] 1 kyū 47,761 42,923 14,338 (33.4%) 135,616 110,937 28,550 (25.7%)
2 kyū 34,782 31,805 11,884 (37.4%) 186,226 152,198 40,975 (26.9%)
3 kyū 16,808 15,710 8,664 (55.1%) 143,252 113,526 53,806 (47.4%)
4 kyū 3,908 3,383 2,332 (68.9%) 64,127 53,476 27,767 (51.9%)
2008[30] 1 kyū 52,992 46,953 18,454 (39.3%) 138,131 116,271 38,988 (33.5%)
2 kyū 41,924 38,040 16,289 (42.8%) 187,482 157,142 58,124 (37.0%)
3 kyū 22,016 20,351 13,304 (65.4%) 147,435 120,569 69,605 (57.7%)
4 kyū 4,524 3,903 2,765 (70.8%) 65,877 55,828 31,227 (55.9%)
2009-1[31] 1 kyū 29,274 26,578 11,738 (44.2%) 103,349 87,104 28,230 (32.4%)
2 kyū 26,437 24,793 9,279 (37.4%) 130,753 110,266 27,543 (25.0%)
2009-2[32] 1 kyū 46,648 41,998 12,293 (29.3%) 137,708 114,725 26,427 (23.0%)
2 kyū 36,528 33,807 12,462 (36.9%) 176,628 147,328 41,488 (28.2%)
3 kyū 17,703 16,675 9,360 (56.1%) 131,733 108,867 51,903 (47.7%)
4 kyū 3,212 2,932 2,155 (73.5%) 61,995 53,041 29,529 (55.7%)
2010-1[33] N1 26,225 23,694 9,651 (40.7%) 73,863 62,938 19,402 (30.8%)
N2 24,738 23,126 13,768 (59.5%) 87,889 74,874 32,530 (43.4%)
N3 6,947 6,280 3,051 (48.6%) 42,227 32,100 12,574 (39.2%)
2010-2[34] N1 40,041 36,810 12,774 (34.7%) 100,689 87,763 25,781 (29.4%)
N2 27,947 26,020 11,679 (44.9%) 106,402 91,996 30,460 (33.1%)
N3 8,363 7,665 3,501 (44.9%) 56,236 45,906 18,883 (41.1%)
N4 7,764 7,317 3,716 (50.8%) 48,613 41,484 19,235 (46.4%)
N5 2,065 1,870 1,458 (78.0%) 43,676 38,128 22,846 (59.9%)
2011-1[35] N1 24,716 22,782 6,546 (28.7%) 89,744 76,991 20,519 (26.7%)
N2 19,203 17,957 9,057 (50.4%) 92,015 79,716 30,216 (37.9%)
N3 5,642 5,211 2,511 (48.2%) 36,841 29,507 13,230 (44.8%)
N4 3,643 3,358 1,431 (42.6%) 19,010 15,453 5,802 (37.5%)
N5 716 649 464 (71.5%) 12,346 10,510 6,108 (58.1%)
2011-2[36] N1 36,426 33,460 11,849 (35.4%) 100,873 88,450 26,715 (30.2%)
N2 22,875 21,296 8,695 (40.8%) 94,538 82,944 28,679 (34.6%)
N3 8,149 7,580 3,073 (40.5%) 49,917 41,655 16,576 (39.8%)
N4 7,008 6,596 3,083 (46.7%) 38,888 33,402 14,722 (44.1%)
N5 1,603 1,481 1,045 (70.6%) 33,245 29,159 16,986 (58.3%)
2012-1[37] N1 26,051 24,142 11,074 (45.9%) 78,904 69,082 23,789 (34.4%)
N2 20,041 18,843 9,683 (51.4%) 78,553 69,418 29,191 (42.1%)
N3 7,317 6,878 3,232 (47.0%) 38,650 31,942 14,391 (45.1%)
N4 5,437 5,116 2,388 (46.7%) 22,431 18,590 8,489 (45.7%)
N5 1,004 925 679 (73.4%) 16,361 13,911 8,129 (58.4%)
2012-2[38] N1 32,917 30,296 7,998 (26.4%) 86,004 75,250 17,411 (23.1%)
N2 21,139 19,612 7,919 (40.4%) 79,513 69,790 25,617 (36.7%)
N3 10,085 9,422 2,668 (28.3%) 47,301 39,763 12,722 (32.0%)
N4 6,961 6,562 2,371 (36.1%) 36,799 31,620 11,783 (37.3%)
N5 1,416 1,307 945 (72.3%) 34,178 29,700 16,225 (54.6%)
2013-1[39] N1 27,099 25,117 8,503 (33.9%) 74,674 65,225 20,139 (30.9%)
N2 20,956 19,712 9,117 (46.3%) 73,729 64,885 29,725 (45.8%)
N3 9,988 9,337 3,623 (38.8%) 39,870 32,895 13,063 (39.7%)
N4 5,637 5,297 2,485 (46.9%) 23,746 19,941 9,823 (49.3%)
N5 1,000 905 696 (76.9%) 18,720 16,016 9,957 (62.2%)
2013-2[40] N1 31,691 28,929 10,031 (34.7%) 81,794 71,490 25,524 (35.7%)
N2 22,859 21,211 8,410 (39.6%) 73,935 64,989 28,148 (43.3%)
N3 12,436 11,501 3,911 (34.0%) 48,875 41,129 17,901 (43.5%)
N4 6,963 6,430 2,871 (44.7%) 38,078 32,752 14,290 (43.6%)
N5 1,519 1,392 983 (70.6%) 37,313 31,922 18,248 (57.2%)
2014-1[41] N1 26,277 24,395 9,513 (39.0%) 73,782 64,409 21,108 (32.8%)
N2 22,226 20,855 9,359 (44.9%) 73,829 64,699 29,313 (45.3%)
N3 14,842 13,749 4,362 (31.7%) 42,746 35,251 15,535 (44.1%)
N4 6,643 6,208 3,028 (48.8%) 27,271 22,944 10,657 (46.4%)
N5 1,318 1,175 885 (75.3%) 23,154 19,658 10,726 (54.6%)
2014-2[42] N1 30,061 27,309 8,663 (31.7%) 76,516 66,610 20,260 (30.4%)
N2 27,725 25,548 8,785 (34.4%) 73,274 63,494 25,361 (39.9%)
N3 18,415 16,767 4,796 (28.6%) 51,365 42,642 17,189 (40.3%)
N4 8,123 7,516 2,482 (33.0%) 40,292 34,265 13,142 (38.4%)
N5 1,862 1,696 1,119 (66.0%) 42,172 35,492 17,002 (47.9%)
2015-1[43] N1 27,218 24,971 8,958 (35.9%) 70,453 60,642 20,625 (34.0%)
N2 28,788 26,788 10,819 (40.4%) 74,931 64,764 28,538 (44.1%)
N3 22,389 20,867 6,398 (30.7%) 46,799 38,489 16,081 (41.8%)
N4 9,874 9,332 3,556 (38.1%) 32,597 27,241 9,383 (34.4%)
N5 1,796 1,634 1,190 (72.8%) 29,201 24,569 12,940 (52.7%)
2015-2[44] N1 32,200 29,305 8,911 (30.4%) 74,059 64,355 17,768 (27.6%)
N2 36,147 33,374 10,922 (32.7%) 76,202 65,804 26,408 (40.1%)
N3 27,047 24,683 6,839 (27.7%) 55,103 45,589 19,739 (43.3%)
N4 11,874 10,969 3,325 (30.3%) 45,623 38,566 14,794 (38.4%)
N5 2,408 2,146 1,398 (65.1%) 45,543 38,431 19,203 (50.0%)
2016-1[45] N1 30,218 27,810 10,340 (37.2%) 69,147 59,790 19,396 (32.4%)
N2 39,136 36,525 14,037 (38.4%) 79,208 68,642 32,324 (47.1%)
N3 36,559 34,368 11,447 (33.3%) 50,857 41,816 19,531 (46.7%)
N4 13,435 12,547 4,272 (34.0%) 36,637 30,498 11,960 (39.2%)
N5 2,191 1,977 1,282 (64.8%) 32,286 27,106 13,671 (50.4%)
2016-2[46] N1 37,492 34,065 10,152 (29.8%) 74,584 64,866 20,041 (30.9%)
N2 49,620 45,687 12,962 (28.4%) 86,649 74,949 29,862 (39.8%)
N3 39,881 36,536 11,966 (32.8%) 63,187 52,404 23,389 (44.6%)
N4 15,219 13,937 4,076 (29.2%) 52,626 44,393 15,444 (34.8%)
N5 2,989 2,686 1,577 (58.7%) 54,373 45,200 21,515 (47.6%)
2017-1[47] N1 34,982 31,677 11,100 (35.0%) 74,034 63,021 20,861 (33.1%)
N2 50,787 47,316 18,145 (38.3%) 94,523 80,933 38,216 (47.2%)
N3 47,820 44,847 13,296 (29.6%) 62,494 50,635 22,560 (44.6%)
N4 15,887 14,809 5,084 (34.3%) 43,995 36,193 14,135 (39.1%)
N5 2,791 2,527 1,629 (64.5%) 39,094 32,148 17,180 (53.4%)
2017-2[48] N1 44,029 39,616 12,278 (31.0%) 80,973 69,322 22,010 (31.8%)
N2 62,404 57,374 16,425 (28.6%) 101,151 86,145 34,593 (40.2%)
N3 52,901 48,471 14,907 (30.8%) 74,761 60,855 26,432 (43.4%)
N4 18,190 16,759 4,680 (27.9%) 61,986 51,643 18,504 (35.8%)
N5 3,679 3,280 2,033 (62.0%) 60,630 49,809 23,972 (48.1%)
2018-1[49] N1 40,718 36,791 12,488 (33.9%) 80,896 68,235 22,494 (33.0%)
N2 58,763 54,619 17,994 (32.9%) 105,171 89,320 37,326 (41.8%)
N3 61,878 58,126 17,547 (30.2%) 71,951 58,417 26,691 (45.7%)
N4 18,218 16,737 5,126 (30.6%) 51,353 42,468 14,412 (33.9%)
N5 3,251 2,903 1,836 (63.2%) 51,990 42,463 20,768 (48.9%)
2018-2[50] N1 48,422 43,589 12,015 (27.6%) 83,808 71,416 21,509 (30.1%)
N2 71,816 66,200 19,661 (29.7%) 110,457 94,099 37,523 (39.9%)
N3 67,610 62,627 16,690 (26.6%) 79,761 64,907 28,027 (43.2%)
N4 21,114 19,481 6,418 (32.9%) 68,296 57,009 20,345 (35.7%)
N5 4,290 3,857 2,254 (58.4%) 68,237 55,810 24,913 (44.6%)
2019-1[51] N1 48,079 42,997 12,660 (29.4%) 87,919 73,863 21,575 (29.2%)
N2 69,844 64,503 21,885 (33.9%) 118,683 99,931 37,275 (37.3%)
N3 72,951 68,231 24,513 (35.9%) 84,794 68,019 29,153 (42.9%)
N4 25,060 23,115 7,452 (32.2%) 69,925 56,616 18,613 (32.9%)
N5 4,566 4,085 2,520 (61.7%) 62,283 49,088 22,797 (46.4%)
2019-2[52] N1 58,799 52,147 14,359 (27.5%) 89,689 75,681 24,953 (33.0%)
N2 84,278 77,410 21,852 (28.2%) 118,327 100,630 41,958 (41.7%)
N3 79,876 73,354 20,322 (27.7%) 86,307 70,540 28,033 (39.7%)
N4 31,452 28,826 8,262 (28.7%) 89,443 74,677 23,055 (30.9%)
N5 4,974 4,417 2,379 (53.9%) 74,918 60,405 24,784 (41.0%)
2020-2[53][note 1] N1 44,697 38,537 16,110 (41.8%) 46,704 41,700 20,160 (48.3%)
N2 68,161 61,458 31,126 (50.6%) 59,956 52,618 32,685 (62.1%)
N3 66,700 60,324 30,440 (50.5%) 45,592 37,884 22,709 (59.9%)
N4 28,410 25,184 10,682 (42.4%) 34,192 27,809 12,427 (44.7%)
N5 3,565 2,997 1,982 (66.1%) 26,170 21,517 11,749 (54.6%)
2021-1[55] N1 52,017 44,851 13,401 (29.9%) 58,688 50,324 24,115 (47.9%)
N2 66,567 59,476 20,584 (34.6%) 60,047 51,095 27,597 (54.0%)
N3 61,220 56,230 24,655 (43.8%) 27,481 20,953 12,463 (59.5%)
N4 32,975 30,060 14,522 (48.3%) 13,975 11,014 6,030 (54.7%)
N5 3,432 3,009 1,990 (66.1%) 10,969 8,903 6,052 (68.0%)
2021-2[56] N1 53,899 45,445 12,120 (26.7%) 53,893 44,091 18,806 (42.7%)
N2 66,272 58,559 17,078 (29.2%) 53,365 42,839 25,001 (58.4%)
N3 53,398 48,770 16,806 (34.5%) 44,420 33,513 20,413 (60.9%)
N4 23,353 20,849 7,472 (35.8%) 35,803 27,662 13,601 (49.2%)
N5 2,397 2,004 1,351 (67.4%) 33,410 25,260 15,638 (61.9%)
2022-1[57] N1 46,964 41,076 9,964 (24.3%) 59,348 49,223 17,282 (35.1%)
N2 53,872 48,551 12,828 (26.4%) 67,023 54,542 25,677 (47.1%)
N3 37,595 33,946 14,274 (42.0%) 52,735 41,264 21,058 (51.0%)
N4 17,542 15,424 5,934 (38.5%) 50,508 40,120 19,389 (48.3%)
N5 2,520 2,156 1,367 (63.4%) 38,118 30,203 16,132 (53.4%)
  1. ^ Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, only the December test session was offered in 2020. The July test session was cancelled. [54]

Previous format (1984–2009)

Until 2009, the test had four levels.[4] JLPT certificates do not expire,[5] so results from the previous format remain valid.

All instructions on the test were written in Japanese, although their difficulty is adjusted to remain appropriate to each test level.[58] The subject matter covered at each level of the examination was based upon the Test Content Specification (出題基準, Shutsudai kijun), first published in 1994 and revised in 2004. This specification served as a reference for examiners to compile test questions, rather than as a study guide for candidates. It consisted of kanji lists, expression lists, vocabulary lists, and grammar lists for all four JLPT levels. However, about 20% of the kanji, vocabulary, and grammar in any one exam may have been drawn from outside the prescribed lists at the discretion of exam compilers.[59]

Test content summary[60]
Level Kanji Vocabulary Listening Time of Study (est.) Pass Mark
4 ~100 (103) ~800 (728) Basic 150 hrs (A Basic course level) 60%
3 ~300 (284) ~1,500 (1409) Intermediate 300 hrs (An Intermediate course level)
2 ~1000 (1023) ~6,000 (5035) Intermediate 600 hrs (An Intermediate course level)
1 ~2000 (1926) ~10,000 (8009) Advanced 900 hrs (An advanced course level) 70%

Numbers in parentheses indicate the exact number in the Test Content Specification.[59]

The independent source the Japanese Language Education Center publishes the following study hour comparison data:

JLPT Study Hour Comparison Data 1992-2010[61]
Level Students with kanji knowledge 

(e.g. speakers of Chinese)

Other students

(no prior kanji knowledge)

4 200~300 hours 250~400 hours
3 375~475 hours 500~750 hours
2 1100~1500 hours 1400~2000 hours
1 1800~2300 hours 3100~4500 hours

Test sections

In its previous format, the JLPT was divided into three sections: "Characters and Vocabulary" (100 points), "Listening Comprehension" (100 points), and "Reading Comprehension and Grammar" (200 points).

The first section (文字・語彙, moji, goi) tests knowledge of vocabulary and various aspects of the Japanese writing system. This includes identifying the correct kanji characters for given situations, selecting the correct hiragana readings for given kanji, choosing the appropriate terms for given sentences, and choosing the appropriate usage of given words.

The second section (聴解, chōkai) comprises two sub-sections that test listening comprehension. The first involves choosing the picture which best represents the situation presented by a prerecorded conversation. The second is of a similar format but presents no visual clues.

Section three (読解・文法, dokkai, bunpō) uses authentic or semi-authentic reading passages of various lengths to test reading comprehension. Questions include prompts to fill in blank parts of the text and requests to paraphrase key points. Grammar questions request that examinees select the correct grammar structure to convey a given point or test conjugations and postpositional particle agreement.

Exam duration
Level Kanji and
vocabulary
Listening
comprehension
Reading
comprehension
and grammar
Total duration
4 25 min 25 min 50 min 100 min
3 35 min 35 min 70 min 140 min
2 35 min 40 min 70 min 145 min
1 45 min 45 min 90 min 180 min

Comparison with new format

Two changes in levels of tests were made from the previous four-level format: firstly, a new level was inserted between the old level 3 and level 2, and secondly, the content of the top level exam (old level 1) was changed to test slightly more advanced skills, though the passing level was not changed,[62] possibly through equating of test scores. Vocabulary in particular is said to be taken from an increased pool of 18,000 words.

The addition of the new N3 was done to address the problem of the difficulty gap between levels 3 and 2: in the past, there had been requests for revisions to address the fact that examinees who had passed the Level 3 test often had trouble with passing the Level 2 test because of the large gap in the level of skill needed to pass those two levels. There was also a desire to measure abilities more advanced than those targeted by the current Level 1 test, hence the top-level exam was modified.[63]

The correspondence is as follows:

  • N1: slightly more advanced than the original level 1,[64] but the same passing level
  • N2: the same as the original level 2
  • N3: in between the original level 2 and level 3
  • N4: the same as the original level 3
  • N5: the same as the original level 4

The revised test continues to test the same content categories as the original, but the first and third sections of the test have been combined into a single section.[22] Sections on oral and writing skills were not introduced.[7] Further, a requirement to pass individual sections was added, rather than only achieving an overall score.

It has been argued that changes to the exam were connected to the introduction of new language policies instituted by the Ministry of Education regarding the education of minorities in Japan.[65]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Objectives and History". Japan Foundation. Retrieved June 20, 2011.
  2. ^ a b "List of Overseas Test Sites, JLPT page". Japan Foundation. Retrieved January 14, 2012.
  3. ^ "N1-N5: Summary of Linguistic Competence Required for Each Level". Japan Foundation. Retrieved November 26, 2012.
  4. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 29 April 2013. Retrieved 2 May 2015.
  5. ^ a b "FAQ -JLPT Japanese-Language Proficiency Test". Retrieved 2 May 2015.
  6. ^ "Introduction". The Japan Foundation. Retrieved 2009-05-01.
  7. ^ a b (PDF) (in Japanese). Japan Foundation. 2008-05-25. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 13, 2008. Retrieved May 13, 2008.
  8. ^ "What is EJU?". Japan Student Services Organisation. Retrieved May 30, 2006.
  9. ^ The 2005 Language Proficiency Test Level 1 and 2 Questions and Correct Answers, JEES & The Japan Foundation, Japan, 2006, pages 88 and 99. ISBN 4-89358-609-2
  10. ^ "2009-2nd examination results, part 3" (PDF). JEES. Retrieved July 29, 2010.
  11. ^ Hiragana Times, "Japanese-Language Proficiency Test", Volume #294, April 2011, p. 4.
  12. ^ "日本語教師センター". 23 August 2020.
  13. ^ a b "Number of Applicants and Examinees by Test Site" (PDF). JEES. Retrieved 4 March 2020.
  14. ^ "Point Evaluation Mechanism | Points-based Preferential Immigration Treatment for Highly-Skilled Foreign Professionals". www.immi-moj.go.jp. Retrieved 2020-02-27.
  15. ^ "Advantages of JLPT - JLPT Japanese-Language Proficiency Test". Retrieved 2 May 2015.
  16. ^ "平成24年度就学義務猶予免除者等の中学校卒業程度認定試験(中卒認定)受験案内". Retrieved 2 May 2015.
  17. ^ . Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Archived from the original on 2010-02-14. Retrieved January 31, 2009.
  18. ^ Chen, Ping and Nanette Gottlieb. Language Planning and Language Policy: East Asian Perspectives, Routledge, 2001, page 43.
  19. ^ (PDF). JEES and The Japan Foundation. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 11, 2009. Retrieved February 18, 2009.
  20. ^ The 2005 Language Proficiency Test Level 1 and 2 Questions and Correct Answers, page 122.
  21. ^ a b "New Japanese-Language Proficiency Test FAQ". The Japan Foundation, JEES. Retrieved November 19, 2010.
  22. ^ a b . The Japan Foundation. Archived from the original on August 22, 2008. Retrieved February 21, 2009.
  23. ^ "Composition of Test Sections and Items". The Japan Foundation. Retrieved March 27, 2022.
  24. ^ . The Japan Language Education Center. Archived from the original on November 17, 2015. Retrieved November 4, 2015.
  25. ^ GENKI: An Integrated Course in Elementary Japanese Vol. 1 [3rd Edition] - ジャパンタイムズ出版 BOOKCLUB.
  26. ^ "Microsoft Word - Sophia JPN course_CEFR_level.docx" (PDF). Retrieved 2022-07-30.
  27. ^ "Taalverwerving IIIA: Conversatie & luistervaardigheid, teksten: Gevorderd niveau, kanji V, 2010-2011 - Studiegids - Universiteit Leiden".
  28. ^ (PDF). JEES and The Japan Foundation. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 11, 2009. Retrieved February 18, 2009.
  29. ^ 2007年結果の概要,実施国・地域別応募者数・受験者数 2009-12-28 at the Wayback Machine JEES. Retrieved 5 April 2010.
  30. ^ 2008年結果の概要,実施国・地域別応募者数・受験者数 2009-08-23 at the Wayback Machine JEES. Retrieved 5 April 2010.
  31. ^ 2009年度1回日本語能力試験実施状況 JEES. Retrieved 5 March 2010.
  32. ^ 2009年度2回日本語能力試験実施状況 JEES. Retrieved 5 March 2010.
  33. ^ Data of the test in 2010 (July) JEES. Retrieved 27 November 2010.
  34. ^ Data of the test in 2010 (December) JEES. Retrieved 12 February 2011.
  35. ^ Data of the test in 2011 (July) JEES. Retrieved 13 September 2011.
  36. ^ Data of the test in 2011 (December) JEES. Retrieved 29 December 2018
  37. ^ Data of the test in 2012 (July) JEES. Retrieved 29 December 2018
  38. ^ Data of the test in 2012 (December) JEES. Retrieved 29 August 2012
  39. ^ Data of the test in 2013 (July) JEES. Retrieved 3 May 2015
  40. ^ Data of the test in 2013 (December) JEES. Retrieved 3 May 2015
  41. ^ Data of the test in 2014 (July) JEES. Retrieved 29 December 2018
  42. ^ Data of the test in 2014 (December) JEES. Retrieved 27 June 2017
  43. ^ Data of the test in 2015 (July) JEES. Retrieved 27 June 2017
  44. ^ Data of the test in 2015 (December) JEES. Retrieved 27 June 2017
  45. ^ Data of the test in 2016 (July) JEES. Retrieved 27 June 2017
  46. ^ Data of the test in 2016 (December) JEES. Retrieved 29 December 2018
  47. ^ Data of the test in 2017 (July) JEES. Retrieved 29 December 2018
  48. ^ Data of the test in 2017 (December) JEES. Retrieved 29 December 2018
  49. ^ Data of the test in 2018 (July) JEES. Retrieved 29 December 2018
  50. ^ Data of the test in 2018 (December) JEES. Retrieved 6 April 2019
  51. ^ Data of the test in 2019 (July) JEES. Retrieved 15 March 2020
  52. ^ Data of the test in 2019 (December) JEES. Retrieved 17 April 2020
  53. ^ Data of the test in 2020 (December) JEES. Retrieved 05 June 2021
  54. ^ Cancellation of the test in 2020 (July) of the Japanese-Language Proficiency Test (JLPT) JEES. Retrieved 15 December 2022
  55. ^ Data of the test in 2021 (July) JEES. Retrieved 24 April 2022
  56. ^ Data of the test in 2021 (December) JEES. Retrieved 24 April 2022
  57. ^ Data of the test in 2022 (July) JEES. Retrieved 15 December 2022
  58. ^ Noda, Hiroshi and Mari Noda. Acts of Reading: Exploring Connections in Pedagogy of Japanese, University of Hawaii Press, 2003, page 219.
  59. ^ a b Japanese Language Proficiency Test: Test Content Specifications (Revised Edition), The Japan Foundation and Association of International Education, Japan, 2004. ISBN 4-89358-281-X.
  60. ^ "Guidelines for the Japanese-Language Proficiency Test in 2009 (December)" (PDF). Japan Foundation and Japan Educational Exchanges and Services. Retrieved March 17, 2011.
  61. ^ . The Japan Language Education Center. Archived from the original on July 16, 2011. Retrieved January 25, 2011.
  62. ^ (PDF). Committee for Revision of the Japanese-Language Proficiency Test, JEES and The Japan Foundation. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 6, 2009. Retrieved February 21, 2009.
  63. ^ . The Japan Foundation. Archived from the original on 2008-08-22. Retrieved 2009-02-21.
  64. ^ "Get your motor running for the revamped JLPT". Kanji Clinic. from the original on July 3, 2017. Retrieved July 14, 2017.
  65. ^ Roxanne Lizelle Niveri; Sol Rojas-Lizana (24 December 2019). "'Changes' to the new Japanese-Language Proficiency Test: Newly emerged language policies for non-Japanese and Japanese citizens". Electronic Journal of Contemporary Japanese Studies. 19 (3). Retrieved 26 December 2019.

External links

  • 日本語能力試験 JLPT (in Japanese), the official JLPT website
  • The Japanese-Language Proficiency Test, the official English-language website by JEES and the Japan Foundation

japanese, language, proficiency, test, 日本語能力試験, nihongo, nōryoku, shiken, jlpt, standardized, criterion, referenced, test, evaluate, certify, japanese, language, proficiency, native, speakers, covering, language, knowledge, reading, ability, listening, ability. The Japanese Language Proficiency Test 日本語能力試験 Nihongo Nōryoku Shiken or JLPT is a standardized criterion referenced test to evaluate and certify Japanese language proficiency for non native speakers covering language knowledge reading ability and listening ability 1 The test is held twice a year in Japan and selected countries on the first Sunday of July and December and once a year in other regions on the first Sunday of December 2 Japanese Language Proficiency TestAcronymJLPTTypeLanguage proficiency testYear started1984LanguagesJapaneseWebsitewww wbr jlpt wbr jpThe JLPT consists of five levels 3 Until 2009 the test had four levels with 4 being the lowest and 1 being the highest level of certification 4 JLPT certificates do not expire or become invalid over time 5 Contents 1 History 2 Statistics 2 1 By country 2 2 By city 3 Acceptance in Japan 4 Administration 5 Test format 5 1 Scoring 5 2 Pass marks 5 3 Test sections 5 4 Estimated study time 5 5 Comparison with Common European Framework of Reference for Languages 5 6 Older edition 6 Applications and results 7 Previous format 1984 2009 7 1 Test sections 7 2 Comparison with new format 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory EditThe JLPT was first held in 1984 in response to the growing demand for standardized Japanese language certification 6 Initially 7 000 people took the test 7 Until 2003 the JLPT was one of the requirements for foreigners entering Japanese universities Since 2003 the Examination for Japanese University Admission for International Students EJU is used by most universities for this purpose 8 unlike the JLPT which is solely a multiple choice exam the EJU contains sections which require the examinee to write in Japanese Statistics EditIn 2004 the JLPT was offered in 40 countries including Japan Of the 302 198 examinees in that year 47 around 140 000 were certified for their respective levels 9 The number of candidates continued to rise to 559 056 in 2008 while the percentage of candidates certified has fallen below 36 In 2009 when a revised system was introduced in which two exams are held each year in East Asia a total of 768 114 people took the exam 10 In 2010 610 000 people took the test 11 In 2019 1 168 535 people took the test 12 By country Edit Top 10 countries with the most test takers Country Number of examinees 2018 first half 13 Japan 195 754China 118 912South Korea 41 972Taiwan 37 804Vietnam 35 854Myanmar 16 923Thailand 14 664Indonesia 11 868India 11 707Philippines 9 572By city Edit Top 10 cities with the most test takers City or prefecture Country Number of examinees 2018 13 Tokyo Japan 49 369Taipei Taiwan 18 033Hanoi Vietnam 17 526Aichi Japan 16 609Osaka Japan 16 293Seoul South Korea 15 513Ho Chi Minh Vietnam 14 909Yangon Myanmar 14 377Chiba Japan 13 834Kanagawa Japan 13 790Acceptance in Japan EditTest takers who pass JLPT N1 receive 15 points and those who pass JLPT N2 receive 10 points under the government s Point based Preferential Immigration Treatment System for Highly Skilled Foreign Professionals Individuals with a total of 70 points or higher receive preferential treatment at immigration 14 N1 is a prerequisite for foreign medical professionals who wish to take examinations to be licensed in Japan and for certain foreign nationals who wish to attend nursing school in Japan 15 Those who have passed either N1 or N2 regardless of citizenship are exempt from the Japanese language section of the middle school equivalency examination which is required to enter a Japanese high school if the applicant did not graduate from a Japanese middle school 16 N1 is sometimes accepted instead of the Examination for Japanese University Admission for foreign students who wish to study at Japanese universities One of the requirements for the nurse caregiver candidates under the EPA Under the Economic Partnership Agreement EPA with Indonesia the Philippines and Vietnam a JLPT certificate is required for Indonesian Filipino approximately Level N5 or higher and Vietnamese Level N3 or higher nurse or caregiver candidates who visit Japan Administration EditInternationalexam sites 2 17 East Asia South Korea Seoul Incheon Suwon Seongnam Anyang Cheonan Cheongju Daejeon Jeonju Gwangju Chuncheon Goyang Bucheon Wonju Busan Gimhae Yangsan Daegu Gumi Changwon Jinju Ulsan Pohang Jeju People s Republic of China Beijing Shanghai Changchun Dalian Guangzhou Shenyang Tianjin Harbin Xi an Chongqing Jinan Wuhan Xiamen Fuzhou Hangzhou Hohhot Luoyang Suzhou Qingdao Changsha Chengdu Nanjing Hefei Shenzhen Nanchang Shijiazhuang Taiyuan Ningbo Wuxi Guiyang Urumqi Hong Kong Hong Kong Macau Macau Mongolia Ulaanbaatar Republic of China Taipei Kaohsiung Taichung TaoyuanSoutheast Asia Indonesia Jakarta Bandung Surabaya Medan Yogyakarta Padang Denpasar Manado Malang Semarang Makassar Palembang Cambodia Phnom Penh Siem Reap Singapore Singapore Thailand Bangkok Chiang Mai Songkhla Khon Kaen Philippines Manila Cebu Davao Cagayan de Oro Brunei Bandar Seri Begawan Vietnam Hanoi Ho Chi Minh Da Nang Hue Malaysia Kuala Lumpur Penang Ipoh Johor Bahru Kota Kinabalu Myanmar Yangon Mandalay Bago Laos VientianeSouth and Central Asia India New Delhi Pune Kolkata Chennai Bangalore Mumbai Sri Lanka Colombo Nepal Kathmandu Pakistan Islamabad Karachi Bangladesh Dhaka Uzbekistan Tashkent Kazakhstan Almaty Kyrgyzstan BishkekOceania Australia Canberra Brisbane Perth Sydney Melbourne Adelaide New Zealand Auckland Wellington ChristchurchNorth America Canada Vancouver Toronto Edmonton United States Ann Arbor Atlanta Boston Boulder Chicago Columbus Fayetteville Honolulu Houston Los Angeles New York Philadelphia Seattle San Francisco Washington D C Mexico Mexico City MonterreySouth America Argentina Buenos Aires Brazil Sao Paulo Londrina Belem Rio de Janeiro Porto Alegre Brasilia Salvador Manaus Colombia Bogota Ecuador Quito Paraguay Asuncion Uruguay Montevideo Venezuela Caracas Chile Santiago Peru Lima Bolivia Santa Cruz La PazEurope Italy Rome Milan Venice United Kingdom London Edinburgh Cardiff The Netherlands Leiden Greece Athens Switzerland Bern Spain Madrid Barcelona Granada Valencia Santiago de Compostela Las Palmas Denmark Copenhagen Germany Dusseldorf Stuttgart Berlin Hamburg Finland Helsinki France Paris Lyon Ukraine Kyiv Hungary Budapest Bulgaria Sofia Serbia Belgrade Poland Warsaw Romania Bucharest Ireland Dublin Russia Moscow Vladivostok Novosibirsk Khabarovsk Yuzhno Sakhalinsk Irkutsk Saint Petersburg Bulgaria Sofia Austria ViennaMiddle East and Africa Israel Haifa Egypt Cairo Kenya Nairobi Morocco Rabat Madagascar Antananarivo South Africa Johannesburg Turkey AnkaraIn Japan the JLPT is administered by the Ministry of Education Culture Sports Science and Technology MEXT through the Japan Educational Exchanges and Services JEES 18 Overseas the Japan Foundation co proctors test administration with local cultural exchange and or educational institutions or with committees specially established for this purpose 19 20 Test format EditThe revised test pattern was implemented in 2010 The test consists of five levels N1 N2 N3 N4 and N5 with N1 being the highest level and N5 the lowest No Test Content Specification is published as it is discouraged to study from kanji and vocabulary lists 21 Level A summary of linguistic competence required for each levelN1 Advanced Level The ability to understand Japanese used in a variety of circumstances ReadingOne can read writings with logical complexity and or abstract writings on a variety of topics such as newspaper editorials and critiques and comprehend both their structures and contents One is also able to read written materials with profound content on various topics and follow their narratives as well as understand the intent of the writers comprehensively ListeningOne can comprehend orally presented materials such as coherent conversations news reports and lectures spoken at natural speed in a broad variety of settings and can follow their ideas and comprehend their contents comprehensively One is also able to understand the details of the presented materials such as the relationships among the people involved the logical structures and the essential points N2 Pre Advanced Level The ability to understand Japanese used in everyday situations and a variety of circumstances to a certain degree ReadingOne can read materials written clearly on a variety of topics such as articles and commentaries in newspapers and magazines as well as simple critiques and comprehend their contents One is also able to read written materials on general topics and follow their narratives as well as understand the intent of the writers ListeningOne can comprehend orally presented materials such as coherent conversations and news reports spoken at nearly natural speed in everyday situations as well as in a variety of settings and can follow their ideas and comprehend their contents One is also able to understand the relationships among the people involved and the essential points of the presented materials N3 Intermediate Level The ability to understand Japanese used in everyday situations to a certain degree ReadingOne can read and understand written materials with specific contents concerning everyday topics One is also able to grasp summary information such as newspaper headlines In addition one is also able to read slightly difficult writings encountered in everyday situations and understand the main points of the content if some alternative phrases are available to aid one s understanding ListeningOne can listen and comprehend coherent conversations in everyday situations spoken at near natural speed and is generally able to follow their contents as well as grasp the relationships among the people involved N4 Elementary Level The ability to understand basic Japanese ReadingOne can read and understand passages on familiar daily topics written in basic vocabulary and kanji ListeningOne can listen and comprehend conversations encountered in daily life and generally follow their contents provided that they are spoken slowly N5 Basic Level The ability to understand some basic Japanese ReadingOne can read and understand typical expressions and sentences written in hiragana katakana and basic kanji ListeningOne can listen and comprehend conversations about topics regularly encountered in daily life and classroom situations and can pick up necessary information from short conversations spoken slowly Scoring Edit Passing is based on scaled scores calculated using item response theory Raw scores are not directly used to determine conditions for passing nor are they reported except in rough form in the Reference Information section 21 Raw scores are converted to a standard scale so that equivalent performance on tests from different years and different levels of difficulty yields the same scaled score The scaled scores are reported broken down by section and these are the scores used to determine passing In addition a Reference Information section is provided on the report card this is purely informational for the examinee s future studies and is not used in determining if an examinee has passed The grade given is based on the raw score and is either A B or C accordingly as the raw score was 67 or above between 34 and 66 or below 34 This reference information is given for vocabulary grammar and reading on the N4 and N5 and for vocabulary and grammar but not reading on the N1 N2 and N3 In both cases this breaks down the score on the Language Knowledge section into separate skills but in neither case is performance on the listening section analyzed Pass marks Edit Passing the test requires both achieving an overall pass mark for the total points and passing each section individually these are based on the scaled scores The sectional scores are to ensure that skills are not unbalanced so one cannot pass by doing well in the reading section but poorly in the listening section for instance The overall pass mark depends on the level and varies between 100 180 55 55 for the N1 and 80 180 44 44 for the N5 The pass marks for individual sections are all 19 60 31 67 equivalently 38 120 19 60 for the large section on the N4 and N5 Note that the sectional pass levels are below the overall pass level at 31 67 instead of 44 44 55 55 one need not achieve the overall pass level on each section These standards were adopted starting in July 2010 and do not vary from year to year with the scaling instead varying Pass marks for individual sections 22 Level Overall pass mark Language Knowledge Vocabulary Grammar Reading ListeningN1 100 points 19 points 19 points 19 pointsN2 90 points 19 points 19 points 19 pointsN3 95 points 19 points 19 points 19 pointsTotal possible 180 points 60 points 60 points 60 pointsN4 90 points 38 points 19 pointsN5 80 points 38 points 19 pointsTotal possible 180 points 120 points 60 pointsTest sections Edit Level Test section 23 test time Total durationN1 Language Knowledge Vocabulary Grammar Reading 110 min Listening 60 min 170 minN2 Language Knowledge Vocabulary Grammar Reading 105 min Listening 50 min 155 minN3 Language Knowledge Vocabulary 30 min Language Knowledge Grammar Reading 70 min Listening 40 min 140 minN4 Language Knowledge Vocabulary 25 min Language Knowledge Grammar Reading 55 min Listening 35 min 115 minN5 Language Knowledge Vocabulary 20 min Language Knowledge Grammar Reading 40 min Listening 30 min 90 minNote Vocabulary includes kanji and vocabulary previous 文字 語彙 Estimated study time Edit Study hour comparison data for students residing in Japan published by the Japanese Language Education Center JLPT Study Hour Comparison Data 2010 2015 24 Level Students with kanji knowledge e g speakers of Chinese Other students no prior kanji knowledge N1 1700 2600 hours 3000 4800 hoursN2 1150 1800 hours 1600 2800 hoursN3 700 1100 hours 950 1700 hoursN4 400 700 hours 575 1000 hoursN5 250 450 hours 325 600 hoursComparison with Common European Framework of Reference for Languages Edit Although the Japan Foundation has not given any official table of comparison between the CEFR and the JLPT several Japanese language textbooks 25 and language courses at the university level based on the competencies required for each level tend to use the following table of comparison 26 27 JLPT and CEFR JLPT Level CEFRN1 B2 C1N2 B1 B2N3 B1N4 A2N5 A1 A2Older edition Edit Test content summary used 2004 2009 Brackets indicate the exact number in the Test Content Specification 2004 edition Level Kanji Vocabulary Listening Hours of Study estimated Pass Mark4 100 103 800 728 Beginner 150 60 3 300 284 1 500 1409 Basic 3002 1000 1023 6 000 5035 Intermediate 6001 2000 1926 10 000 8009 Advanced 900 70 Applications and results EditThe application period is usually around early March until late April for July s examination and around early August until late September for December s exam Results for the December test are announced the following February for examinees in Japan and March for overseas candidates Test results are sent to the examinees through the testing organization or center to which they applied 28 From 2012 with online registration results are available online before they are mailed out late August for the July test All examinees receive a report indicating their scores by section Those who pass also receive a Certificate of Proficiency Year Level JLPT in Japan JLPT overseasApplicants Examinees Certified Applicants Examinees Certified 2007 29 1 kyu 47 761 42 923 14 338 33 4 135 616 110 937 28 550 25 7 2 kyu 34 782 31 805 11 884 37 4 186 226 152 198 40 975 26 9 3 kyu 16 808 15 710 8 664 55 1 143 252 113 526 53 806 47 4 4 kyu 3 908 3 383 2 332 68 9 64 127 53 476 27 767 51 9 2008 30 1 kyu 52 992 46 953 18 454 39 3 138 131 116 271 38 988 33 5 2 kyu 41 924 38 040 16 289 42 8 187 482 157 142 58 124 37 0 3 kyu 22 016 20 351 13 304 65 4 147 435 120 569 69 605 57 7 4 kyu 4 524 3 903 2 765 70 8 65 877 55 828 31 227 55 9 2009 1 31 1 kyu 29 274 26 578 11 738 44 2 103 349 87 104 28 230 32 4 2 kyu 26 437 24 793 9 279 37 4 130 753 110 266 27 543 25 0 2009 2 32 1 kyu 46 648 41 998 12 293 29 3 137 708 114 725 26 427 23 0 2 kyu 36 528 33 807 12 462 36 9 176 628 147 328 41 488 28 2 3 kyu 17 703 16 675 9 360 56 1 131 733 108 867 51 903 47 7 4 kyu 3 212 2 932 2 155 73 5 61 995 53 041 29 529 55 7 2010 1 33 N1 26 225 23 694 9 651 40 7 73 863 62 938 19 402 30 8 N2 24 738 23 126 13 768 59 5 87 889 74 874 32 530 43 4 N3 6 947 6 280 3 051 48 6 42 227 32 100 12 574 39 2 2010 2 34 N1 40 041 36 810 12 774 34 7 100 689 87 763 25 781 29 4 N2 27 947 26 020 11 679 44 9 106 402 91 996 30 460 33 1 N3 8 363 7 665 3 501 44 9 56 236 45 906 18 883 41 1 N4 7 764 7 317 3 716 50 8 48 613 41 484 19 235 46 4 N5 2 065 1 870 1 458 78 0 43 676 38 128 22 846 59 9 2011 1 35 N1 24 716 22 782 6 546 28 7 89 744 76 991 20 519 26 7 N2 19 203 17 957 9 057 50 4 92 015 79 716 30 216 37 9 N3 5 642 5 211 2 511 48 2 36 841 29 507 13 230 44 8 N4 3 643 3 358 1 431 42 6 19 010 15 453 5 802 37 5 N5 716 649 464 71 5 12 346 10 510 6 108 58 1 2011 2 36 N1 36 426 33 460 11 849 35 4 100 873 88 450 26 715 30 2 N2 22 875 21 296 8 695 40 8 94 538 82 944 28 679 34 6 N3 8 149 7 580 3 073 40 5 49 917 41 655 16 576 39 8 N4 7 008 6 596 3 083 46 7 38 888 33 402 14 722 44 1 N5 1 603 1 481 1 045 70 6 33 245 29 159 16 986 58 3 2012 1 37 N1 26 051 24 142 11 074 45 9 78 904 69 082 23 789 34 4 N2 20 041 18 843 9 683 51 4 78 553 69 418 29 191 42 1 N3 7 317 6 878 3 232 47 0 38 650 31 942 14 391 45 1 N4 5 437 5 116 2 388 46 7 22 431 18 590 8 489 45 7 N5 1 004 925 679 73 4 16 361 13 911 8 129 58 4 2012 2 38 N1 32 917 30 296 7 998 26 4 86 004 75 250 17 411 23 1 N2 21 139 19 612 7 919 40 4 79 513 69 790 25 617 36 7 N3 10 085 9 422 2 668 28 3 47 301 39 763 12 722 32 0 N4 6 961 6 562 2 371 36 1 36 799 31 620 11 783 37 3 N5 1 416 1 307 945 72 3 34 178 29 700 16 225 54 6 2013 1 39 N1 27 099 25 117 8 503 33 9 74 674 65 225 20 139 30 9 N2 20 956 19 712 9 117 46 3 73 729 64 885 29 725 45 8 N3 9 988 9 337 3 623 38 8 39 870 32 895 13 063 39 7 N4 5 637 5 297 2 485 46 9 23 746 19 941 9 823 49 3 N5 1 000 905 696 76 9 18 720 16 016 9 957 62 2 2013 2 40 N1 31 691 28 929 10 031 34 7 81 794 71 490 25 524 35 7 N2 22 859 21 211 8 410 39 6 73 935 64 989 28 148 43 3 N3 12 436 11 501 3 911 34 0 48 875 41 129 17 901 43 5 N4 6 963 6 430 2 871 44 7 38 078 32 752 14 290 43 6 N5 1 519 1 392 983 70 6 37 313 31 922 18 248 57 2 2014 1 41 N1 26 277 24 395 9 513 39 0 73 782 64 409 21 108 32 8 N2 22 226 20 855 9 359 44 9 73 829 64 699 29 313 45 3 N3 14 842 13 749 4 362 31 7 42 746 35 251 15 535 44 1 N4 6 643 6 208 3 028 48 8 27 271 22 944 10 657 46 4 N5 1 318 1 175 885 75 3 23 154 19 658 10 726 54 6 2014 2 42 N1 30 061 27 309 8 663 31 7 76 516 66 610 20 260 30 4 N2 27 725 25 548 8 785 34 4 73 274 63 494 25 361 39 9 N3 18 415 16 767 4 796 28 6 51 365 42 642 17 189 40 3 N4 8 123 7 516 2 482 33 0 40 292 34 265 13 142 38 4 N5 1 862 1 696 1 119 66 0 42 172 35 492 17 002 47 9 2015 1 43 N1 27 218 24 971 8 958 35 9 70 453 60 642 20 625 34 0 N2 28 788 26 788 10 819 40 4 74 931 64 764 28 538 44 1 N3 22 389 20 867 6 398 30 7 46 799 38 489 16 081 41 8 N4 9 874 9 332 3 556 38 1 32 597 27 241 9 383 34 4 N5 1 796 1 634 1 190 72 8 29 201 24 569 12 940 52 7 2015 2 44 N1 32 200 29 305 8 911 30 4 74 059 64 355 17 768 27 6 N2 36 147 33 374 10 922 32 7 76 202 65 804 26 408 40 1 N3 27 047 24 683 6 839 27 7 55 103 45 589 19 739 43 3 N4 11 874 10 969 3 325 30 3 45 623 38 566 14 794 38 4 N5 2 408 2 146 1 398 65 1 45 543 38 431 19 203 50 0 2016 1 45 N1 30 218 27 810 10 340 37 2 69 147 59 790 19 396 32 4 N2 39 136 36 525 14 037 38 4 79 208 68 642 32 324 47 1 N3 36 559 34 368 11 447 33 3 50 857 41 816 19 531 46 7 N4 13 435 12 547 4 272 34 0 36 637 30 498 11 960 39 2 N5 2 191 1 977 1 282 64 8 32 286 27 106 13 671 50 4 2016 2 46 N1 37 492 34 065 10 152 29 8 74 584 64 866 20 041 30 9 N2 49 620 45 687 12 962 28 4 86 649 74 949 29 862 39 8 N3 39 881 36 536 11 966 32 8 63 187 52 404 23 389 44 6 N4 15 219 13 937 4 076 29 2 52 626 44 393 15 444 34 8 N5 2 989 2 686 1 577 58 7 54 373 45 200 21 515 47 6 2017 1 47 N1 34 982 31 677 11 100 35 0 74 034 63 021 20 861 33 1 N2 50 787 47 316 18 145 38 3 94 523 80 933 38 216 47 2 N3 47 820 44 847 13 296 29 6 62 494 50 635 22 560 44 6 N4 15 887 14 809 5 084 34 3 43 995 36 193 14 135 39 1 N5 2 791 2 527 1 629 64 5 39 094 32 148 17 180 53 4 2017 2 48 N1 44 029 39 616 12 278 31 0 80 973 69 322 22 010 31 8 N2 62 404 57 374 16 425 28 6 101 151 86 145 34 593 40 2 N3 52 901 48 471 14 907 30 8 74 761 60 855 26 432 43 4 N4 18 190 16 759 4 680 27 9 61 986 51 643 18 504 35 8 N5 3 679 3 280 2 033 62 0 60 630 49 809 23 972 48 1 2018 1 49 N1 40 718 36 791 12 488 33 9 80 896 68 235 22 494 33 0 N2 58 763 54 619 17 994 32 9 105 171 89 320 37 326 41 8 N3 61 878 58 126 17 547 30 2 71 951 58 417 26 691 45 7 N4 18 218 16 737 5 126 30 6 51 353 42 468 14 412 33 9 N5 3 251 2 903 1 836 63 2 51 990 42 463 20 768 48 9 2018 2 50 N1 48 422 43 589 12 015 27 6 83 808 71 416 21 509 30 1 N2 71 816 66 200 19 661 29 7 110 457 94 099 37 523 39 9 N3 67 610 62 627 16 690 26 6 79 761 64 907 28 027 43 2 N4 21 114 19 481 6 418 32 9 68 296 57 009 20 345 35 7 N5 4 290 3 857 2 254 58 4 68 237 55 810 24 913 44 6 2019 1 51 N1 48 079 42 997 12 660 29 4 87 919 73 863 21 575 29 2 N2 69 844 64 503 21 885 33 9 118 683 99 931 37 275 37 3 N3 72 951 68 231 24 513 35 9 84 794 68 019 29 153 42 9 N4 25 060 23 115 7 452 32 2 69 925 56 616 18 613 32 9 N5 4 566 4 085 2 520 61 7 62 283 49 088 22 797 46 4 2019 2 52 N1 58 799 52 147 14 359 27 5 89 689 75 681 24 953 33 0 N2 84 278 77 410 21 852 28 2 118 327 100 630 41 958 41 7 N3 79 876 73 354 20 322 27 7 86 307 70 540 28 033 39 7 N4 31 452 28 826 8 262 28 7 89 443 74 677 23 055 30 9 N5 4 974 4 417 2 379 53 9 74 918 60 405 24 784 41 0 2020 2 53 note 1 N1 44 697 38 537 16 110 41 8 46 704 41 700 20 160 48 3 N2 68 161 61 458 31 126 50 6 59 956 52 618 32 685 62 1 N3 66 700 60 324 30 440 50 5 45 592 37 884 22 709 59 9 N4 28 410 25 184 10 682 42 4 34 192 27 809 12 427 44 7 N5 3 565 2 997 1 982 66 1 26 170 21 517 11 749 54 6 2021 1 55 N1 52 017 44 851 13 401 29 9 58 688 50 324 24 115 47 9 N2 66 567 59 476 20 584 34 6 60 047 51 095 27 597 54 0 N3 61 220 56 230 24 655 43 8 27 481 20 953 12 463 59 5 N4 32 975 30 060 14 522 48 3 13 975 11 014 6 030 54 7 N5 3 432 3 009 1 990 66 1 10 969 8 903 6 052 68 0 2021 2 56 N1 53 899 45 445 12 120 26 7 53 893 44 091 18 806 42 7 N2 66 272 58 559 17 078 29 2 53 365 42 839 25 001 58 4 N3 53 398 48 770 16 806 34 5 44 420 33 513 20 413 60 9 N4 23 353 20 849 7 472 35 8 35 803 27 662 13 601 49 2 N5 2 397 2 004 1 351 67 4 33 410 25 260 15 638 61 9 2022 1 57 N1 46 964 41 076 9 964 24 3 59 348 49 223 17 282 35 1 N2 53 872 48 551 12 828 26 4 67 023 54 542 25 677 47 1 N3 37 595 33 946 14 274 42 0 52 735 41 264 21 058 51 0 N4 17 542 15 424 5 934 38 5 50 508 40 120 19 389 48 3 N5 2 520 2 156 1 367 63 4 38 118 30 203 16 132 53 4 Due to the COVID 19 pandemic only the December test session was offered in 2020 The July test session was cancelled 54 Previous format 1984 2009 EditUntil 2009 the test had four levels 4 JLPT certificates do not expire 5 so results from the previous format remain valid All instructions on the test were written in Japanese although their difficulty is adjusted to remain appropriate to each test level 58 The subject matter covered at each level of the examination was based upon the Test Content Specification 出題基準 Shutsudai kijun first published in 1994 and revised in 2004 This specification served as a reference for examiners to compile test questions rather than as a study guide for candidates It consisted of kanji lists expression lists vocabulary lists and grammar lists for all four JLPT levels However about 20 of the kanji vocabulary and grammar in any one exam may have been drawn from outside the prescribed lists at the discretion of exam compilers 59 Test content summary 60 Level Kanji Vocabulary Listening Time of Study est Pass Mark4 100 103 800 728 Basic 150 hrs A Basic course level 60 3 300 284 1 500 1409 Intermediate 300 hrs An Intermediate course level 2 1000 1023 6 000 5035 Intermediate 600 hrs An Intermediate course level 1 2000 1926 10 000 8009 Advanced 900 hrs An advanced course level 70 Numbers in parentheses indicate the exact number in the Test Content Specification 59 The independent source the Japanese Language Education Center publishes the following study hour comparison data JLPT Study Hour Comparison Data 1992 2010 61 Level Students with kanji knowledge e g speakers of Chinese Other students no prior kanji knowledge 4 200 300 hours 250 400 hours3 375 475 hours 500 750 hours2 1100 1500 hours 1400 2000 hours1 1800 2300 hours 3100 4500 hoursTest sections Edit In its previous format the JLPT was divided into three sections Characters and Vocabulary 100 points Listening Comprehension 100 points and Reading Comprehension and Grammar 200 points The first section 文字 語彙 moji goi tests knowledge of vocabulary and various aspects of the Japanese writing system This includes identifying the correct kanji characters for given situations selecting the correct hiragana readings for given kanji choosing the appropriate terms for given sentences and choosing the appropriate usage of given words The second section 聴解 chōkai comprises two sub sections that test listening comprehension The first involves choosing the picture which best represents the situation presented by a prerecorded conversation The second is of a similar format but presents no visual clues Section three 読解 文法 dokkai bunpō uses authentic or semi authentic reading passages of various lengths to test reading comprehension Questions include prompts to fill in blank parts of the text and requests to paraphrase key points Grammar questions request that examinees select the correct grammar structure to convey a given point or test conjugations and postpositional particle agreement Exam duration Level Kanji and vocabulary Listening comprehension Readingcomprehensionand grammar Total duration4 25 min 25 min 50 min 100 min3 35 min 35 min 70 min 140 min2 35 min 40 min 70 min 145 min1 45 min 45 min 90 min 180 minComparison with new format Edit Two changes in levels of tests were made from the previous four level format firstly a new level was inserted between the old level 3 and level 2 and secondly the content of the top level exam old level 1 was changed to test slightly more advanced skills though the passing level was not changed 62 possibly through equating of test scores Vocabulary in particular is said to be taken from an increased pool of 18 000 words The addition of the new N3 was done to address the problem of the difficulty gap between levels 3 and 2 in the past there had been requests for revisions to address the fact that examinees who had passed the Level 3 test often had trouble with passing the Level 2 test because of the large gap in the level of skill needed to pass those two levels There was also a desire to measure abilities more advanced than those targeted by the current Level 1 test hence the top level exam was modified 63 The correspondence is as follows N1 slightly more advanced than the original level 1 64 but the same passing level N2 the same as the original level 2 N3 in between the original level 2 and level 3 N4 the same as the original level 3 N5 the same as the original level 4The revised test continues to test the same content categories as the original but the first and third sections of the test have been combined into a single section 22 Sections on oral and writing skills were not introduced 7 Further a requirement to pass individual sections was added rather than only achieving an overall score It has been argued that changes to the exam were connected to the introduction of new language policies instituted by the Ministry of Education regarding the education of minorities in Japan 65 See also EditBusiness Japanese Proficiency Test Test of Chinese as a Foreign Language TOCFL Mandarin Proficiency Test HSK ILR scale J Test Kanji kentei Test of Proficiency in Korean List of language proficiency testsReferences Edit Objectives and History Japan Foundation Retrieved June 20 2011 a b List of Overseas Test Sites JLPT page Japan Foundation Retrieved January 14 2012 N1 N5 Summary of Linguistic Competence Required for Each Level Japan Foundation Retrieved November 26 2012 a b Comparison of with Old Tests JLPT Japanese Language Proficiency Test Archived from the original on 29 April 2013 Retrieved 2 May 2015 a b FAQ JLPT Japanese Language Proficiency Test Retrieved 2 May 2015 Introduction The Japan Foundation Retrieved 2009 05 01 a b 第2回 日本語能力試験改訂 中間報告 PDF in Japanese Japan Foundation 2008 05 25 Archived from the original PDF on September 13 2008 Retrieved May 13 2008 What is EJU Japan Student Services Organisation Retrieved May 30 2006 The 2005 Language Proficiency Test Level 1 and 2 Questions and Correct Answers JEES amp The Japan Foundation Japan 2006 pages 88 and 99 ISBN 4 89358 609 2 2009 2nd examination results part 3 PDF JEES Retrieved July 29 2010 Hiragana Times Japanese Language Proficiency Test Volume 294 April 2011 p 4 日本語教師センター 23 August 2020 a b Number of Applicants and Examinees by Test Site PDF JEES Retrieved 4 March 2020 Point Evaluation Mechanism Points based Preferential Immigration Treatment for Highly Skilled Foreign Professionals www immi moj go jp Retrieved 2020 02 27 Advantages of JLPT JLPT Japanese Language Proficiency Test Retrieved 2 May 2015 平成24年度就学義務猶予免除者等の中学校卒業程度認定試験 中卒認定 受験案内 Retrieved 2 May 2015 List of Local Host Institutions of JLPT Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs Archived from the original on 2010 02 14 Retrieved January 31 2009 Chen Ping and Nanette Gottlieb Language Planning and Language Policy East Asian Perspectives Routledge 2001 page 43 Japanese Language Proficiency Test guidelines 2006 PDF page 1 PDF JEES and The Japan Foundation Archived from the original PDF on July 11 2009 Retrieved February 18 2009 The 2005 Language Proficiency Test Level 1 and 2 Questions and Correct Answers page 122 a b New Japanese Language Proficiency Test FAQ The Japan Foundation JEES Retrieved November 19 2010 a b Points for Revision The Japan Foundation Archived from the original on August 22 2008 Retrieved February 21 2009 Composition of Test Sections and Items The Japan Foundation Retrieved March 27 2022 JLPT Study Hour Comparison Data 2010 2015 The Japan Language Education Center Archived from the original on November 17 2015 Retrieved November 4 2015 GENKI An Integrated Course in Elementary Japanese Vol 1 3rd Edition ジャパンタイムズ出版 BOOKCLUB Microsoft Word Sophia JPN course CEFR level docx PDF Retrieved 2022 07 30 Taalverwerving IIIA Conversatie amp luistervaardigheid teksten Gevorderd niveau kanji V 2010 2011 Studiegids Universiteit Leiden Japanese Language Proficiency Test guidelines 2006 PDF page 3 PDF JEES and The Japan Foundation Archived from the original PDF on July 11 2009 Retrieved February 18 2009 2007年結果の概要 実施国 地域別応募者数 受験者数 Archived 2009 12 28 at the Wayback Machine JEES Retrieved 5 April 2010 2008年結果の概要 実施国 地域別応募者数 受験者数 Archived 2009 08 23 at the Wayback Machine JEES Retrieved 5 April 2010 2009年度1回日本語能力試験実施状況 JEES Retrieved 5 March 2010 2009年度2回日本語能力試験実施状況 JEES Retrieved 5 March 2010 Data of the test in 2010 July JEES Retrieved 27 November 2010 Data of the test in 2010 December JEES Retrieved 12 February 2011 Data of the test in 2011 July JEES Retrieved 13 September 2011 Data of the test in 2011 December JEES Retrieved 29 December 2018 Data of the test in 2012 July JEES Retrieved 29 December 2018 Data of the test in 2012 December JEES Retrieved 29 August 2012 Data of the test in 2013 July JEES Retrieved 3 May 2015 Data of the test in 2013 December JEES Retrieved 3 May 2015 Data of the test in 2014 July JEES Retrieved 29 December 2018 Data of the test in 2014 December JEES Retrieved 27 June 2017 Data of the test in 2015 July JEES Retrieved 27 June 2017 Data of the test in 2015 December JEES Retrieved 27 June 2017 Data of the test in 2016 July JEES Retrieved 27 June 2017 Data of the test in 2016 December JEES Retrieved 29 December 2018 Data of the test in 2017 July JEES Retrieved 29 December 2018 Data of the test in 2017 December JEES Retrieved 29 December 2018 Data of the test in 2018 July JEES Retrieved 29 December 2018 Data of the test in 2018 December JEES Retrieved 6 April 2019 Data of the test in 2019 July JEES Retrieved 15 March 2020 Data of the test in 2019 December JEES Retrieved 17 April 2020 Data of the test in 2020 December JEES Retrieved 05 June 2021 Cancellation of the test in 2020 July of the Japanese Language Proficiency Test JLPT JEES Retrieved 15 December 2022 Data of the test in 2021 July JEES Retrieved 24 April 2022 Data of the test in 2021 December JEES Retrieved 24 April 2022 Data of the test in 2022 July JEES Retrieved 15 December 2022 Noda Hiroshi and Mari Noda Acts of Reading Exploring Connections in Pedagogy of Japanese University of Hawaii Press 2003 page 219 a b Japanese Language Proficiency Test Test Content Specifications Revised Edition The Japan Foundation and Association of International Education Japan 2004 ISBN 4 89358 281 X Guidelines for the Japanese Language Proficiency Test in 2009 December PDF Japan Foundation and Japan Educational Exchanges and Services Retrieved March 17 2011 JLPT Study Hour Comparison Data 1992 2010 The Japan Language Education Center Archived from the original on July 16 2011 Retrieved January 25 2011 Revision of the Japanese Language Proficiency Test Second Progress Report 2008 PDF pages 4 5 PDF Committee for Revision of the Japanese Language Proficiency Test JEES and The Japan Foundation Archived from the original PDF on March 6 2009 Retrieved February 21 2009 Points for Revision The Japan Foundation Archived from the original on 2008 08 22 Retrieved 2009 02 21 Get your motor running for the revamped JLPT Kanji Clinic Archived from the original on July 3 2017 Retrieved July 14 2017 Roxanne Lizelle Niveri Sol Rojas Lizana 24 December 2019 Changes to the new Japanese Language Proficiency Test Newly emerged language policies for non Japanese and Japanese citizens Electronic Journal of Contemporary Japanese Studies 19 3 Retrieved 26 December 2019 External links Edit日本語能力試験 JLPT in Japanese the official JLPT website The Japanese Language Proficiency Test the official English language website by JEES and the Japan Foundation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Japanese Language Proficiency Test amp oldid 1127593658, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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