Learning Japanese

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This is a slightly old survey carried out in March 2001 by the government regarding foreigners learning Japanese. Japanese language classrooms from around the country were sampled, with 581 foreigners aged 16 and above living in Japan responding to the questions. The questioning was, presumably, carried out in the native language of the respondents, but it does say that the question and answer sheet was read and completed by the respondent. Note that especially if local government classes were selected, the level of the classes would be rather low. Due to the lack of Japanese language teachers and the cost of one-to-one lessons, I think that lower-level students would be over-represented in this survey. Amongst my foreign friends and acquaintences, once we pass JLPT 3 level we tend to stop formal study.

First, Japanese language ability in various formal situations was investigated, broken down by length of study of Japanese. It doesn’t say if this means fulltime or nightschool classes, which would make a huge difference to ability, of course.

Q: In which of the following situations can you communicate in Japanese?

  All Less than one year One to two years More than two years
Talking to doctor about illness 63.7% 56.2% 78.1% 88.8%
Discussions/questions with council officials, etc 50.6% 43.2% 63.5% 76.3%
Reading notices from schools or council, etc 48.9% 43.2% 56.3% 71.3%
Writing a CV 37.5% 33.5% 45.8% 47.5%
Reading work documents 28.7% 25.4% 36.5% 40.0%

Reading and writing ability seems rather too high!

Next, five situations where Japanese may be needed were rated in degrees from “absolutely essential”, “needed”, and so on down to presumably “not needed at all”. Note, this is a summary of a full survey, so a lot of detail is omitted.

Q: Do you think Japanese ability is absolutely essential in the following situations?

Exchanging greetings 60.4%
Telephoning a Japanese person 50.3%
Asking for directions 48.4%
Talking to doctor about illness 47.3%
Writing addressing in kanji 44.2%

Q: Can you do the following reading tasks?

  All Read hiragana Read katakana Read romaji Can’t read kanji but understand the meaning Can read some kanji Can read kanji Can read and understand kanji Can’t read anything No answer
All 581 84.3% 75.2% 51.5% 15.0% 48.5% 12.9% 19.6% 1.9% 1.4%
<1 year study 370 85.4% 74.9% 54.9% 17.6% 47.0% 11.1% 16.5% 1.9% 0.5%
1-2 years study 96 88.5% 79.2% 50.0% 11.5% 47.9% 19.8% 22.9% 2.1%
>2 years study 80 86.3% 85.0% 43.8% 7.5% 66.3% 15.0% 32.5% 1.3%

I hope that table makes sense! I think if there had been some more distiction made between understanding kanji and reading (ie, knowing the Japanese pronounciation) kanji it would have been better, as Chinese (and Koreans to some extent) have a distinct advantage over other foreigners in that respect.

Q: Can you do the following writing tasks?

  All Write hiragana Write katakana Write romaji Write a few kanji Can’t write enough kanji by hand but can when using word processor Write sufficient kanji Can’t write at all No answer
All 581 84.0% 73.7% 49.1% 49.4% 9.3% 17.6% 2.9% 1.4%
<1 year study 370 84.6% 74.1% 51.9% 45.9% 7.8% 17.8% 2.4% 0.5%
1-2 years study 96 89.6% 78.1% 50.0% 57.3% 11.5% 17.7% 3.1% 1.0%
>2 years study 80 86.3% 78.8% 43.8% 68.8% 11.3% 16.3% 1.3% 1.3%

Q: What do you hope will be the outcome of your studies? (Multiple answers, top five answers only presented)

Become able to speak Japanese 59.0%
Can increase number of friends 55.9%
Be able to get to know neighbours 36.8%
Can understand TV programs better than before 32.2%
Be able to write my name 31.5%

Q: How will you use the results of your studies? (Multiple answers, top five answers only presented) Not sure on the exact difference between this and the last question!

Speak Japanese 71.1%
Study lifestyle and culture 54.2%
Increase number of friends 47.7%
Talk with everyone 43.7%
Deepen understanding of the differences in culture and viewpoint 30.8%

Uggh, that was impossible to translate! I had to skip the last couple of tables as they made very little sense to me. There looks as if there ought to have been another document describing the survey questions in more details, but I can’t see it at all.

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