One of the first days I was at language school in Tokyo my teacher asked "Why would you even want to study Japanese, you know English?" That always stuck with me and you'll get these comments from family, friends, and teachers too. Remember, you don't have to justify your language learning to anyone. If you want to do it, just do it. Here's the Akita Inaka School video series for those interested: akitainakaschool.com/video-lesson-series Receive 50% off with code 'AKITA50'
"Why would you even want to study Japanese, you know English?" Hmm...Now I'm wondering if my ex was your teacher because I definitely recognize that tone. hehe I used to call it "unnecessary rhetorical sarcasm" and I eventually learned that she definitely learned it from her mom. 😏
I live in S. Florida, so I have definitely gotten "Why do you study Japanese, it is better you learn Spanish" quite a few times. It is discouraging to hear that, but it is just like Anming says, I learn Japanese because I want to. My favorite singer is Japanese, and I want to understand what she says myself, so that is my inspiration to learn
Learning languages is interesting, it opens your mind a lot. Though they're useless I can't imagine using only one language anymore. When you learn something interesting you can't imagine thinking the way you thought before, it happens with languages, physics, psychology, and many other subjects.
So this also explains why the Japanese are so disciplined and orderly. It's been instilled in them since childhood. It's a good and bad thing at the same time.
@@donnawoodford6641 The USA has one of the highest percentage of bipolar people in the world n their education system is very different from Japan's so the causes are not that simple
@@donnawoodford6641 Bipolar is caused by demonic influencers. These evil entities control thoughts, desires, and actions. It often takes over all of you, a.k.a "possessed". Inwardly, the form they take on, you take on, thus, "multiple personalities". Your reference is the Bible. Pointing to one's mental state or social state is addressing symptoms, not the cause. The root cause is spirit. And by the way, it is the godless anti-Christian countries with the majority population bipolar, to the degree it is their "normal". Cases in the US 'stand-out' and get called-out to create the most controversy. But the actual numbers in NO WAY are "the highest percentages in the world". America has the most conversation over the least cases. Read a book.
There are 3 Japanese language school Near my house in Tokyo. This is so accurate. Most of the students pass level 1 JPlT in 2 years or less. However, I haven’t met any students who could hold a conversation or understand basic conversation. They pass the test and get the certificate, but it really lacks meaning. Go to the county side and learn Japanese far from Tokyo.
@@davidalger5625 You can prepare for any take the exam without going to a language school. I did it in 2 years while working full time for an English school. I spent all my free time studying and talking to people about every topic possible. You don’t need the Tokyo School to get level 1.
@@victorjackson150 And you don't need a college degree for a job, nor do you need a job to make money. But that does not make college degree or a language school a scam. There are many different ways to get to goals.
Lol you just summed up English education in Japan. Japanese English teachers can’t even speak to their native English assistants…. And even go so far as to teach their student bad English knowing that it’s wrong, but will get the, a higher test score.
I went to a language school in Tokyo in 2019 too. But actually I had a pretty good experience. We spoke a lot in japanese to the teacher and to our classmates about the topics we learned with. We even held a presentation about our hometown in japanese and I felt like my japanese was progressing extremely fast in a very short time. I did notice some strict teachers and a lot of students from other asian countries and it was pretty challenging at some points to stick with the rest. So still I guess it is true that you get to know your teacher and surrounding differently in less crowded places and get a more friendly and open approach on teaching but I dont regret going there. :)
I went to language school in Tokyo. The school was more aimed at westerners.The classes were good and we got a lot of time to practice speaking. They were on the pricey side of classes and there was a max of 8 students per class. Depending on the class some had 8 students, but some would only have 2 or 3 students. The teachers were friendly and some would talk with us during breaks.
Same for me. I feel like this video is an advertisement for this particular school, which might be great... but my experience at a different language school was totally different from hers and my teachers were great.
If I had the chance to go to Japan I think the last place I'd visit is somewhere like Tokyo, but I'm not a big fan of cities in general. I'd be happier in smaller communities like I am here in the UK, the dog attack was so cute.
@@OrientalPearl I know I would have to learn at least some Japanese. But in my experience people in smaller communities are very friendly, and I'm sure they would have fun laughing at the tall Gaijin :)
@@darcyperkins7041 Thanks, so I've heard! We're just not fans of large cities... I could visit Tokyo, but doubt I could live there, even with its positives.
As an aspiring Japanese language learner, who sometimes feel to old to learn a new language. Thank you for these videos!! I would love to go to Kagoshima.
100% true. I went to a japanese language school in Tokyo and I am not going to repeat it anymore 😆 I learned more by myself than in "the school". The same happened to me when I wanted to drink water haha 😂 And the thing is studying languages you can know how's the culture, is an importan tool when you're in another country. But I totally agree no one needs to justify "why", everyone has their own reason.
That’s funny that the being called out for drinking water thing happened to you to. Yeah, I also learned more from language exchange than in the school. But at least it gave me some competition and some structure.
when I was at school in the UK (I'm English) in the early 80s, we had rules just as strict as that. We could not talk, we had to sit up straight, no eating in class, no drinking, no fidgeting, and if we did something wrong, we'd be told to stand up and put our hands on our heads for the rest of the lesson. That level of strictness was normal. I think standards have slipped a lot in the past 40 years.
@@akuseru85 I love it when 14 year olds try to argue the opposite, when they don't know how it was in the past, they just have notions from films or telly.
Just finished session 1 with Pimsleur! I am writing down all the sentences so I can practice on my own. But I'd like a tutor a few times a month. I think it would help. Also, I avoid big cities. Smaller rural communities are wonderful, from my experience in Japan! A fellow at the ticket office was trying to tell us which train not to get on. One that stops at all the small towns. Ya, we got on it. The fellow in line behind us watched us and saw our mistake and got us on the right train. So grateful for him!
@@OrientalPearl I'm amazed at your video and editing skills! I had to go back and watch the first part again. To get the interaction with the teacher and students like you did is really awesome!
This is fantastic info, thank you so much Anming. I'm trying to collect as much useful, exciting and interesting info as I can for my nephew. He loves everything Japanese, and we really want him to go and live there and experience life before he gets to stuck into 'adult' life and constraints. Your videos are great. Thanks 😊
After studying in Tokyo for a year, I literally wanted to give up on Japanese because I felt so alone in such a big city 😭 I was also extremely KY and didn’t understand how to 空気を読む at all 🥺 buuuut after studying in Shanghai, I made friends with Japanese classmates from kansai and gave Japanese another try~~ and fell in love all over again by experiencing the countryside communities!! 💕💕 Japan is really beautifully diverse like you said, and I really wish I’d seen this video 5 years ago and knew that Tokyo isn’t the only part of Japan!! ❤️❤️❤️ thank you so much for this!! ✨✨
Anming, This experience is so precious for others to experience and read about! If you share these encounters of others who have broken through the cultural barriers of learning a language, you are doing a great service to others! The kendo, the archery, Chado, etc, that others outside of Japan have come to experience and love and have internalized for themselves represent a form of internal mastery that, to me, are the keys to learning and loving a language and the people who speak it.❤️💝🙏
I’ve had my fair share of strict adults in my life, but Adults and teachers elsewhere like Japan is on another level. I’m American so it’s kinda hard for understand how that strict environment feels.
Omg! This is exactly what I experienced in college with a native Japanese teacher, in my country!! Our class even had to bow in the beginning and at the end of the class!! After one year of learning by that japanese method I can say that I can do the tests ( from 0 to 20 I finished that year with 19) and I can catch some simple conversations and words but if you ask me to talk, I can't!! And my will to go again to college for the second year with the the same teacher is zero! 😅 I'm glad you shared your experience here, I'm feeling better!! Thank you!! 🙏💖😊
My Korean skills are very basic and mostly for survival, my mom and others tried teaching me but their patience only lasted for small stretches. No matter how much I tried to learn, their strict demands were never satisfied. So I can relate to the brain fart moments trying to communicate with native speakers, the pressure, ugh!
I passed for that when I moved to germany for half an year. I could understand people if they were not speed talking, but the pressure of talking correctly made me freeze.
Excellent advice and input! Extremely helpful, and for anyone reading this who may be just starting out - she's a great resource! She's actually in it to help others, and I appreciate the experience being shared. ありがとうございます。
I've been self studying for around 3 years now and recently, I was wondering what it was like to study in the big cities like Tokyo and Osaka and becoming somewhat jealous of people who got the chance to go and do that. However after watching this video I feel glad that I have self studied. I think I pictured such a wonderful image in my head but this video has made me feel more confident not worrying when I do eventually go there. I think many people forget that language is there in order communicate, not to "look good" for tests. Thank you for making video's like this. ✨ありがとうございます🙏
I’m a big proponent of formal language classes, but the point I wanted to make in this video is that there are a lot of Japanese language schools in big cities that are just JLPT score factories. I really got a lot out of the language school in China.
Hi, I am 16 years old and I started to learn Japanese recently, I would like to say that you are a big inspiration for me and I look up to you. It's fascinating how fluent you are speaking Japanese and it makes me look forward and work harder to achieve my goal (which is speaking Japanese). I appreciate your UA-cam videos they are entertaining and somehow it helps me to learn about life in Japan. Thank you for being an inspiration for my dreams, love u :)
I lived in Okinawa for a short summer as an exchange student. I cried like a baby when I had to leave I loved the culture and people so much. I also hosted exchange students from Okinawa for many years here all through high school. I loved the program and wish to go back someday. now Im a dad and so much older , makes things difficult. I love watching your videos because I see and understand so much , the language I have slacked on but I enjoy your content very much and the positive energy you have is always great.
I have been to a language school in Osaka from 2014-2016 and had a fantastic time. We also had loads of people from Europe and America. It was friendly and not exhaustingly strict. We were only allowed to talk in Japanese, had presentations in Japanese and always used what we learned immediately as well as Kanji tests every Friday. I also felt very connected with everyone. After we had completed a "semester" we would always go to eat and sing Karaoke together as a class including Teachers. There was plenty of time to talk with each other, we were allowed to drink during classes and you properly learned Japanese if you put the work into it. For those still getting used to talking in Japanese they also had Japanese people come to the school which you could talk to in Japanese. And people are more open than the other big cities in Osaka. It's all about how willing you are to accustom and open up. I would never want to trade the experience I had there for somewhere else to be honest. But of course it's up to if you want to live somewhere in the nature or in the city of course.
Hey, Can u tell me to which school you went? I'm currently searching for a good school. But most of them have like bad reviews and I'm a bit scared of picking the wrong one. I also really want to go to Osaka due to food and the more friendlier atmosphere. I had found the Daiwa academy. But it has also like a lot of negative reviews :/
@@VoggoSama Unfortunately it seems like the one in Osaka doesn't exist anymore(merged with the one in Kyoto or something like that), however they also have locations in Kyoto, Tokyo and Shinjuku. The schools are all called ARC Academy + the city name!
You are Right about that. A big city like New York City, Singapore, Chicago, Manila, Philadelphia, Seoul, and London are all the same. The people don't care about anyone but themselves. But the people who are far out of the city are so pleasant to be around.
I can't thank you enough for mentioning Pimsleur in a previous video!! Until then I'd been learning Korean with LingoDeer and the TTMIK books. Since downloading Pimsleur I've come on SO much from the audio lessons!! I do each lesson twice and I'm on 26 now. I'm going to keep doing this til I can get a one on one, in-person tutor (kinda hard at the mo!). Watching your videos reminds me to keep going! 👊 Loved this vid as always
I’m go glad to hear that it has helped you so much! I really got a lot from their Japanese program and am now using it to learn Korean. Progressive overload will keep you moving up to higher levels. You’re smart to add in tutoring. If you hit a plateau, which we all do, increase your study time or double for 3 months and see your progress skyrocket.
I'm in love with the countryside of Japan especially Hokkaido and the Ainu are so fascinating. Hokkaido is so beautiful when I do virtual tours. I particularly like the view of Sapporo at night from MT Moiwa. I love snowy japan !
I worked in northern Hokkaido 32 years ago, mostly in Teshikaga, while there for 3 months working on a geophysical survey crew. I enjoyed listening and learning to speak Japanese by going to my favorite snack bar every night. Since most Japanese I met there didn't speak English, it forced me to rapidly learn to understand and attempt to speak Japanese. I fell in love with Japan and I tearfully left 3 months later when our survey was completed. I still miss Japan, Enka music and a beautiful woman named Yumiko to this day!
I get asked all the time why I want to learn Japanese, as it’s not as needed in the big cities. But, that’s the thing! I don’t want to go just to see the city, I want to go to the countryside and ACTUALLY see Japan ❤️
This is a great video! But I’d like to offer a different perspective. For someone like Oriental Pearl, indeed, you’re going to have a rough time and probably dislike it somewhere like Tokyo. But if you’re like me, you’ll appreciate the way things are. I am American but I grew up in the city and had that tunnel vision, work and no play-focused mindset. I came to Japan to work and I’m learning the language to do so (albeit through a university, not language school but very similar teaching styles here to what she is describing) so I’m not here to have fun necessarily. If you are like me, you might enjoy Tokyo and other cities, too! There is such a wonderful structure that gives me peace of mind. That said, the whole practicing talking part is a huge problem. Our classes are a bit better about practicing speaking but I still feel like it’s not enough.
this video fills my soul :') country folk are all the same all around the world. they always value family & bonds, and going out to Japan, & Korea to the countryside/less densely populated areas its precisely how you described it. i liked tokyo, and heck i like most cities i've traveled to... but the one thing ive noticed about all big major cities, is that theres something desensitized about them. its not always the same thing in each city but, it always feels like theres something they lack. maaaan now im going to gear up for another trip to japan!
Awesome advice Anming. I never liked classroom learning like that. I had a lot strict teachers in my day. I don’t think I could put up with that now. Love your videos!
Alright. You got me. I’m going to give Pimsleur a try with Korean. I agree with a lot of what you said regarding Tokyo schools. I first went to Genki JACs which is actually meant for westerners and doesn’t fit what you described but they only go to a low intermediate level. If you want to go higher it’s not a touristy school but one just like you talked about. I was the only the western person in my class (learning JLPT N2 level). Chinese students everywhere. Not the ones that speak English either. They were friendly but we had a real language barrier and they weren’t so serious about Japanese that they would switch to Japanese just for me. A lot of them did sleep in class or play on their phones instead of participating. I thought they were rude and it made me not want to go to class. The kid sitting next to me in class paid no attention and I assumed his Japanese was bad but in fact although he didn’t speak it he was quite literate and able to answer any test question perfectly I later found out. Still not a good environment at all. I would rather go to the country where you filmed this video. The sledding and skiing looks great.
That’s so interesting that you had a similar experience. I ended up making friends with the Chinese students in my class, but like you said they spoke Chinese most of the time instead of Japanese. I’m using Pimsleur for Korean now too. It gave me a great start with Japanese back in 2015. I’m enjoy the learning process all over again. Please come back and give updates on your progress. I’d love to hear them.
This is so interesting and informative video for the students who wanna to study in Japan like me ✋😊 The teachers are so serious and I think this is the main reason why students are so disciplined :)
One of my main concerns is not being able to talk or make sentences in Japanese. I'm on N4 and the whole time I had classes we would religiously follow the Minna no Nihongo textbooks and maybe change a few things/make our own example sentences here and there. The japanese teacher tried to get us to talk, but we were only confident enough to repeat はい、いいえ。It wasn't a language school in Japan, but in my home country and the teacher are amazing people, but there should be more output encouragement( like there was with the other languages I've studied).
@@OrientalPearl yes indeed, I first learned about the school from John Daub, and another UA-camr Life Where I’m From! I always thought learning in the countryside you could actually practise your Japanese in more real life situations so you could therefore learn way more Japanese in the long run! Thank you for doing a video on the Akita School 💜
Great vid. Thanks for all the tips about exploring outside of Tokyo. I only had time to explore Tokyo last time I went to Japan, but I absolutely loved it. Really looking forward to checking out the rest of Japan!
I had teachers like that in high school almost but it became quite relaxed in college. it was a shock in one of my classes to see my professor dressed completely casually with long hair and beard and addressing the class in street talk and slang.
I remember teachers and parents in the US warning me about how college would be hard and to study really hard to be able to keep up in college, and then I found that a good handful of the teachers weren't even professors, and some were more casual and less organized than expected. Then again it depends on what college you go to and what you major in too
What a great summary of language schools in Tokyo! I lived in Tokyo for three years and then moved to Nagoya for seven and my language abilities increased simply by getting out of Tokyo! That was back in the ancient days, 1988-1998. But my experience was the same. Good luck as you continue to learn and inspire others!
Another great video. I find this true in every nation I've visited. The further away you get from the big city, the more down to earth friendly people you find that are just as curious about you as you are about them. Every port we visited in the military, my friends and I would always head to the most remote locations to truly experience the people. As a side benefit, meals and such are much cheaper also lol My only caution is to use common sense and place safety first and read up on an area before you go there.
Wow you’re the 2nd UA-camr who knows Japanese that went to Akira and gave us a snippet of a different language school atmosphere. That looks fun & you get to know the people there as you mentioned & Japanese people living in that beautiful city. I love that you showed the difference of Akira compare to the other school you went to that you were mentioning. As someone who doesn’t mind strict teachers but like the challenge, I don’t know if I can survive no drinking water for a hour and a half 😅 As a friend says I’m a fish I need to drink water very often.
I remember when I was going into my very first year of high school here in america I saw that the school offered chinese (mandarin and cantonese) as an elective class that you could enroll into and take. I was very fortunate enough to have such an opportunity and immediately enrolled to take all four years of chinese language class. It was hands down my most favorite and loved class to attend as it was something I was genuinely passionate and determined to learn. It's truly a shame that the bigger schools in bigger cities like tokyo have that bad policy of not allowing teachers to engage more with their students and it comes off as disconnecting and robotic. To have that extra engagement and getting to know your teachers really helps so much in the learning process more than I can express. My chinese teacher was very laid back, awesome, and overall just a cool person to talk to about all sorts of nerd stuff and chinese culture as a whole. Whenever anyone had trouble with traditional characters or pronunciation he would take time to help people one on one and was extremely patient with folks learning speed. He commanded great respect in the classroom from everyone and when he had to get serious and firm he'd do it and explained to us that it was time to stop goofing off and focus and learn so we can understand the material at hand. He was genuinely a great teacher and I can attest that what pearl says is true. When teachers engage more with their students, get to know them more and put more personal investment as a whole into helping their students learn another language it just hits differently and helps you as the student in the long term. Sadly my lao-shi had to retire and I still thank him to this day for all that he taught me and for never giving up on me and kept helping me to learn chinese. I'm very much looking forward to the day soon when I go to japan myself to attend language school and keep working hard on and learning and improving my japanese language skills.
I’m so glad that you enjoyed your school! I really liked my Chinese language school, but not the Japanese one in Tokyo so much. Seemed like a factory for producing JLPT scores rather than actually teaching Japanese.
@@OrientalPearl Thank you and yeah for sure it was a great class to take and easily one of the best memories I have attending high school. Yeah I've heard a lot of folks say that as well about much bigger schools in those types of bigger cities not being as good and are more by the numbers just trying to get tons of people through for those proficiency tests like in and out without as much investment. That's why I'm looking for a smaller school in japan with smaller class sizes and I'm taking time to consider which one I want to attend in the next couple of years.
8:16 to 8:23 . You NAILED it. I've been wanting to go to Japan my entire life (yes, since I was 5) and everytime someone asks me if I would like to go to Tokyo or Kyoto or Osaka, I say NO.... I mean, I would obviously like to visit but I don't want to go to Japan to be a tourist, I want to live there and what you said in those 7 seconds of this video is the EXACT same thing that I've been telling everyone when I have a conversation about going to Japan. I'd love to live in a quiet little town such as Chichibu in Saitama or near the beach in Kunisaki, Oita for example and be part of the life and the people that live there, not in some big city where people are stuck to stressful routines and where I'll just be another meaningless gaijin. And yes, when it comes to finishing my studies of the language, I would NOT like to do it in a big city and your video just confirmed why.
If you think about it, it makes sense: Schooling was tailored for war and hasn’t been revamped much until very recently (though most schools are still very traditional)
I watched a video about a japanese mechanic for a large company, and I thought his life seemed pretty war like as well. They stood in ranks, did stretches, and wear clean uniforms. Being spartan has its pros and cons, other countries are like that too in different ways.
One of the most beautiful and useful videos I’ve seen about Japan, I want to go to Japan and learn the language, I didn’t know about Akita!thank you so much for the advice! 🙏🏻
This reminds me of my time in a Japanese language school. One of my classmates got scolded quite severely. Why? He had charged his phone at school. Or as the teachers put it; "He is stealing the schools electricity!" Never mind that we all were paying customers right? Big classes where you couldn't hear yourself think during practice, overworked teachers under immense pressure from the school president etc. I wasn't really impressed and I kind of lost my passion for a bit after returning home. (Thankfully only three months). I regained my passion after finding some nice teachers on Italki and taking a hold of my studies on my own. I've learned more, met fun people (and some weird ones too) at a fraction of the price. I will say though, it was a nice, intense start to learning the language. Not worth the price though.
I'm so glad that people like you give people a different perspective on people from different countries, and learning about their languages. Thanks for the video. 👍
Thank you for mentioning all aspects of Japan. I try to avoid watching too much of westerner stuff because I'm from East Europe and my reasons for coming to Japan is exactly the reasons people from other asian countries have because eastern europe has poverty and war and different mindset than west europe or america so thank you for thinking of others and educating everyone. Also the education in my country is pretty much the same like in the Tokyo schools, except there is nothing else here and it's even more rushed.
What a great video. As a linguist currently considering a teaching role in an international school in Yokohama, your comments really resonate with me. Japanese will be the 10th language I've interacted with over my life, with varying facility in each one and nothing close to fluency in any but 2 of those, and I completely agree that learning a language is far more than just memorizing text to pass the test. At any age, language learning is hard work, and you have to offset this with moments of fun and authentic engagement. I will look up the Akita school if my job becomes a reality.
Am studying Portuguese and it's difficult not having anyone around to talk with in that language. The learning process would be faster if I had Portuguese speakers all over the place. You have beautiful eyes @Oriental Pearl
@@OrientalPearl I was just about to recommend that! Try using the bulletin feature to announce when you have free time. You'll have more Portuguese speakers than you can shake a stick at.
I have also heard that most japanese just go each other out of the way, to not to bother or not to be bothered by someone, they are always busy, workaholic, strict, all that stuff, but it's great to see more life outside of the big cities, it was nice to see you guys laughing together, playing and having fun, like having some connection or even friendships and that other people did not seem that strict or serious, I mean, they seemed quite warm hearted, also able to have fun all together. Maybe many tourists judge only from their experiences in big busy cities and it really depends where you are and whom you meet
For someone who has been self learning since 2020, I'm glad I didn't ever go to language classes, mostly because I like self learning not just in languages, so I have a lot more fun like this. Of course, I never really get chances to speak but I know I won't have to struggle too much when I do.
Self study is a great way to start for the first 3-6 months. But after that structure, goals, and a little competition is necessary to propel your studies. The classroom can provide that.
I actually had a really great experience studying at a language school in Tokyo - I think it really depends on the school you choose to study at! A lot of people that I met in Japan were in rigorous language programs because many of the schools want you to pass the JLPT as quickly as possible and start work or attend vocational school. So if that isn't your end goal, then it's important to do some research on the school you go to! Because even "relaxed schools" are still fully immersive, which is a teaching style that takes some time to get used to if you haven't experienced it before. I would also go drinking at izakayas with classmates and teachers after classes, so there are schools that are super relaxed in Tokyo! ***don't want to do too much self-promo, but I have videos about my experiences in japan on my channel too if anyone is interested :)***
Thanks for sharing your experience. I wanted to go to a school call ISI and Ohana in Ikebukuro, but they were always full. A smaller class size would have solved most of the complaints I had.
@@OrientalPearl Oh for sure! My school was called Shibuya Gaigo Gakuen and class sizes were pretty small. It would be super overwhelming with large class sizes, basically just a college lecture at that point. I think the only "complaint" from my experience is that conversation was pushed a lot, but that didn't leave much time for reading and writing, so while my conversation excelled, I didn't really get much experience in kanji and writing. Those things can be perfected individually as long as you have the time and motivation though, but the JLPT is reading and writing focused sooo x.x Akita looks so cool though~! Definitely a different experience from Tokyo!
@@K0nc3pt10n This is interesting, if you don't mind what do you think made your experience different? Were you more okay with handling the strict atmosphere?
So a little late to the party, but this is true. Thousands of dollars for the school I went to in the hot summer of Japan in Tokyo, and the school was... painful! Yes, I am still moving to go there soon, but that school was very painful because they did tests and strictness. I won't go into complete details, but the strict testing system and painfully hard teaching methods were very hard. I passed, but barely. Sadly, my school was better than some schools I have heard about. It's unfortunate. Anyway, language school outside of big cities sounds nice. I'd suggest it.
This video put a smile on my face, recent times have been worrying and sad because of the situation in Europe. So thank you for cheering me up, beating that dough with a big hammer looked like a fun way to make food. Stay safe on the sled hill! :D
I need an 1 hour version of this video, i really like it, dude i have been learning the language for two years an half and i have to tell you jsut like when i started to learn it, like with english for the firts time and when you gradually are reaching the point where you are able to undertand the conversations as well to read it the feeling its so gratifiying. I hope to being able to travel to japan one day to so far in the future.
I would have loved to make it longer and I have a lot more to say about this topic, unfortunately the average watch time from viewers was just over 3 minutes.
4:00 *Akita fluff attack!* 🤣 Anyway, not being allowed to drink anything in class was all the schools I went to. And even in highschool, that was also 90 minute classes. And as for tests and such, the school was also pretty strict, so none of those are really a problem.
I feel sorry for you for the experience you had of Tokyo. I lived there for a year and I have never met so many warm, caring and loving people before. But it's good you found your place in Japan because it's a wonderful and varied country with just as wonderful and varied people 💕
I think that I will buy the course if it's 50% off! When Japan will open Its borders again i want to come to Japan and do a 1 month intensive course to see if I really can pursue my dream, teaching English and Italian in Japan. I wanted to go to Tokyo because I went there in 2019 and it was pretty cool but now I'm doubting it might be not a good idea in the long run. Maybe I should try to stay there 1 month and see how it works with me. After that I can take the 6 months visa and change location. My goal is to take a n3 certificate to be able to study and live in Japan. I'm studying Japanese since the beginning of 2020 (currently a2)
Give it a go! They did a nice job with it. It’s good to have diversity in your learning. I’ve done multiple programs with multiple publishers and lessons.
I've been an exchange student at Yamanashi University in Koufu for a year. Got along well with the Japanese teachers but what really helped me was the contact with the German teachers. I joined the classes and tried to help as much as I could and afterwards we started doing a "language evening". Which involved talking about anything basically in Japanese or German and eating and drinking a lot. Fun days.
SUCH GREAT FOOTAGE!! Freaking Tokyo, sooo uptight. They need to chill and get over themselves. The countryside is waaaayyy better in Japan to live, work and study in
I totally agree with this video. I studied for one year in a japanese school in Tokyo, and after i graduated, I felt like it was a total waste of my money. I learned more by myself or at work than in the school.
I think people being friendlier in the country side as opposed to big cities is the norm in a lot of places. It's like that in the US too. As an American and Japanese hafu, I had a very strange experience when I was in 2nd grade going to a Japanese school in Tokyo. The teacher was teaching the class basic English words (which obviously I knew). She knew I spoke English and wanted me to correct her if she mispronounced or misspelled any words.
How would you describe language schools in Osaka in comparison? Heading out this month and pretty anxious tbh now that I waited a few years just to get started. Thanks for the video Oriental Pearl :)
@@theoc007 I honestly think it's more of a cultural thing based on old school mentality. Education is like being in the military without the guns but just as much stress. lol. It MIGHT be different with individual teachers in some big cities though. But I was in Osaka for 3 years and Noda for 1 year ... Noda almost feels like it's in the middle of nowhere compared to Osaka but it's almost as if my teacher was a clone of two of my old ones. lol
@@Haywood-Jablomie military life is what I grew up on along with serving so it might be alright to deal with. Did you ever find good opportunities while living in Japan by chance?
you misunderstood 1 thing pearl. japanese school doesnt just teach you language but also their culture as well. when the teacher scolded you, it was part of their tradition and part of the school's regulations.
@Redice1202 If you're going to language classes with all Chinese classmates, congratulations you're heading to the bottom of the workforce in Japan. Your classmates are trainees and are happy just to have a chance to make it in Japan. And yes, Japanese people are socialized in this way from elementary school, though increasing numbers drop out/reject it and corporate life entirely. Do what OP recommends and find classes at a proper university or non-profit language school and you might not get treated like an elementary school student and if you have actual skills to back up your attitude you might just make it here (I did.)
Oriental Pearl, you are incredibly charming, and FUNNY, but what’s more, this video is wonderfully informative. I learned things from it, while simultaneously being entertained. You have a way of communicating aspects of Japan that shows insight and understanding.
Well, this is interesting. I'm surprised that you are surprised. I'm in my 60's, but whenever a college professor (I'm emeritus) or employer told me to do, or not do something, that was it. I finished law school a few years ago and yes, drinking, bathroom breaks, hats, colored pens, were often forbidden. There were even professors checking to see if periods and commas were appropriately italicized or not. Take a bar exam and you'll be forbidden mechanical pencils, liquids other than water and whatever else that jurisdiction happens to prohibit. I took language classes in Europe both at private schools and in adult ed. settings and I did notice a difference between them. One of the things I've enjoyed in Japan and in other countries is adapting to the etiquette, culture and customs. If it wasn't different that what you experienced in the past, what would be the value in it. That's diversity. Vive la difference.
Wrong I live in Japan have study Japanese in Osaka an I had wonderful experience. We laughed a lot an till now after 9 years I still freind with teachers. Your its only yours stop making it the truth. Don't bulshit other with your own standard
She isn't wrong, she just has a different perspective. The facts she gave were not wrong, and neither were her feelings about how things were done. Don't assume and invalidate others based on your own experience. It's rather self centered...
Referring to one of your previous videos that showed clips of people hating on you and your channel, I don't understand why. It's videos like these that I really enjoy and it's goofy that anybody wouldn't enjoy these videos. I think it would be cool to see a full length video on your snowboarding adventure. Keep on being awesome.
@@maikeengel4171 also foreigners in america are right when they say that Americans are racists - violent - rude - haters .............extra but you do not accept that from them and keep saying to them : LOVE IT OR LEAVE IT .
@@maikeengel4171 but her complaints against japan are not on negative behaviors . she was complaining on positive rules such as : you can't drink water while you are in the class - you should not make friendship with your teacher ...............extra but the problem of Americans and westerners that they keep complaining and annoying on anything in every country they visit as they want to say : we will not obey and respect your rules and we want to do whatever we want because we are westerners but in the same time when you come to our country ( america & Europe ) you should obey our rules even if it's negative and even if you faced racism or violence and if you did not like that then LOVE IT OR LEAVE IT . Damn . I have never seen filthy arrogant racist and bloody people like the filthy westerners .
Fantastic! What you say about Tokyo and Japan being so very different is so true of so many countries. I live in London, UK ... my brother came to visit once then he went and spent time in the Scottish countryside - in the end he said "I like Scotland much more than England".. but I was quick to point out he'd never been to England.. he'd only been to London :-D
I really wish I had your courage to go out there. Been stuck in one place my whole life, right now supporting family and such, it's hard to leave. I don't even have like a wife or kids but it's still hard to get the courage to leave and if your leaving would put others, you're supporting at a disadvantage you really don't want to leave so you feel stuck. So I just resort to watching people in UA-cam channels like this and dream. I've tried learning Japanese but kind of discouraged at the fact that i'll never move to Japan and not really any Japanese speaker i know in USA to make it worth it, i may end up learning Spanish instead as at least that's useful at work here in Florida.
Great stuff Anming. We really enjoy your videos. You're just so personable and down to earth, it's a pleasure to watch. We really enjoy a glimpse into other places and cultures.
One of the first days I was at language school in Tokyo my teacher asked "Why would you even want to study Japanese, you know English?" That always stuck with me and you'll get these comments from family, friends, and teachers too. Remember, you don't have to justify your language learning to anyone. If you want to do it, just do it. Here's the Akita Inaka School video series for those interested: akitainakaschool.com/video-lesson-series
Receive 50% off with code 'AKITA50'
❤️❤️❤️
Good luck dear 😊😊😊
"Why would you even want to study Japanese, you know English?"
Hmm...Now I'm wondering if my ex was your teacher because I definitely recognize that tone. hehe
I used to call it "unnecessary rhetorical sarcasm" and I eventually learned that she definitely learned it from her mom. 😏
I live in S. Florida, so I have definitely gotten "Why do you study Japanese, it is better you learn Spanish" quite a few times. It is discouraging to hear that, but it is just like Anming says, I learn Japanese because I want to. My favorite singer is Japanese, and I want to understand what she says myself, so that is my inspiration to learn
Learning languages is interesting, it opens your mind a lot. Though they're useless I can't imagine using only one language anymore. When you learn something interesting you can't imagine thinking the way you thought before, it happens with languages, physics, psychology, and many other subjects.
So this also explains why the Japanese are so disciplined and orderly. It's been instilled in them since childhood. It's a good and bad thing at the same time.
Yep. I am half Japanese and I was raised this way (even though we lived in the U.S.). It’s both good and bad.
Right, a chance to become bipolar!
@@donnawoodford6641 The USA has one of the highest percentage of bipolar people in the world n their education system is very different from Japan's so the causes are not that simple
Personally, idk of scientific studies correlating mental illness with types of schooling. What references do you have to share? TY.
@@donnawoodford6641 Bipolar is caused by demonic influencers. These evil entities control thoughts, desires, and actions. It often takes over all of you, a.k.a "possessed". Inwardly, the form they take on, you take on, thus, "multiple personalities". Your reference is the Bible. Pointing to one's mental state or social state is addressing symptoms, not the cause. The root cause is spirit. And by the way, it is the godless anti-Christian countries with the majority population bipolar, to the degree it is their "normal". Cases in the US 'stand-out' and get called-out to create the most controversy. But the actual numbers in NO WAY are "the highest percentages in the world". America has the most conversation over the least cases. Read a book.
There are 3 Japanese language school
Near my house in Tokyo. This is so accurate. Most of the students pass level 1 JPlT in 2 years or less. However, I haven’t met any students who could hold a conversation or understand basic conversation. They pass the test and get the certificate, but it really lacks meaning.
Go to the county side and learn Japanese far from Tokyo.
Agreed. The certificate without being able to hold a conversation is quite meaningless.
Um, except that many jobs require a JLPT1 to be eligible for an interview.
@@davidalger5625 You can prepare for any take the exam without going to a language school. I did it in 2 years while working full time for an English school. I spent all my free time studying and talking to people about every topic possible. You don’t need the Tokyo School to get level 1.
@@victorjackson150 And you don't need a college degree for a job, nor do you need a job to make money. But that does not make college degree or a language school a scam. There are many different ways to get to goals.
Lol you just summed up English education in Japan. Japanese English teachers can’t even speak to their native English assistants…. And even go so far as to teach their student bad English knowing that it’s wrong, but will get the, a higher test score.
I went to a language school in Tokyo in 2019 too. But actually I had a pretty good experience. We spoke a lot in japanese to the teacher and to our classmates about the topics we learned with. We even held a presentation about our hometown in japanese and I felt like my japanese was progressing extremely fast in a very short time. I did notice some strict teachers and a lot of students from other asian countries and it was pretty challenging at some points to stick with the rest. So still I guess it is true that you get to know your teacher and surrounding differently in less crowded places and get a more friendly and open approach on teaching but I dont regret going there. :)
I went to language school in Tokyo. The school was more aimed at westerners.The classes were good and we got a lot of time to practice speaking. They were on the pricey side of classes and there was a max of 8 students per class. Depending on the class some had 8 students, but some would only have 2 or 3 students. The teachers were friendly and some would talk with us during breaks.
Same for me. I feel like this video is an advertisement for this particular school, which might be great... but my experience at a different language school was totally different from hers and my teachers were great.
Thanks for adding to the conversation.
Same here
May I ask what the name of the school was?
If I had the chance to go to Japan I think the last place I'd visit is somewhere like Tokyo, but I'm not a big fan of cities in general. I'd be happier in smaller communities like I am here in the UK, the dog attack was so cute.
You’d be much happier in the countryside here. It’s a lot more fun. But you’re going to need some Japanese to get around smoother.
@@OrientalPearl I know I would have to learn at least some Japanese. But in my experience people in smaller communities are very friendly, and I'm sure they would have fun laughing at the tall Gaijin :)
@RedJoker That's one city we're looking to live in Japan. How do you like it, if you mind my asking?! 🙏
@RedJoker Sorry, I thought you meant you lived in Fukuoka. Thanks for responding!
@@darcyperkins7041 Thanks, so I've heard! We're just not fans of large cities... I could visit Tokyo, but doubt I could live there, even with its positives.
As an aspiring Japanese language learner, who sometimes feel to old to learn a new language. Thank you for these videos!! I would love to go to Kagoshima.
Don’t feel discouraged. My mom is learning now at 54!
Kent, there's no age limit. I'm a woman in her 40s, and I've been learning languages since I was a teenager. With Japanese, I will be at 7.
@@orchidtreasure1484 Thank you for your words of encouragement 😊
I'm a black Londoner who lived for 5 years in Kagoshima (2003 - 2007). It is very different to Tokyo and much more relaxed.
I started with japaneese as a 37yo. And I love it. It is challenging but fun.
100% true. I went to a japanese language school in Tokyo and I am not going to repeat it anymore 😆
I learned more by myself than in "the school".
The same happened to me when I wanted to drink water haha 😂
And the thing is studying languages you can know how's the culture, is an importan tool when you're in another country. But I totally agree no one needs to justify "why", everyone has their own reason.
That’s funny that the being called out for drinking water thing happened to you to. Yeah, I also learned more from language exchange than in the school. But at least it gave me some competition and some structure.
@@akuseru85 Be water my friend x'D
when I was at school in the UK (I'm English) in the early 80s, we had rules just as strict as that.
We could not talk, we had to sit up straight, no eating in class, no drinking, no fidgeting, and if we did something wrong, we'd be told to stand up and put our hands on our heads for the rest of the lesson.
That level of strictness was normal.
I think standards have slipped a lot in the past 40 years.
@@akuseru85 I love it when 14 year olds try to argue the opposite, when they don't know how it was in the past, they just have notions from films or telly.
The water police 😒
I'd hate that! For sure
Just finished session 1 with Pimsleur! I am writing down all the sentences so I can practice on my own. But I'd like a tutor a few times a month. I think it would help.
Also, I avoid big cities. Smaller rural communities are wonderful, from my experience in Japan! A fellow at the ticket office was trying to tell us which train not to get on. One that stops at all the small towns. Ya, we got on it. The fellow in line behind us watched us and saw our mistake and got us on the right train. So grateful for him!
That's so awesome! I'm really glad that you're benefiting from it.
@@OrientalPearl I'm amazed at your video and editing skills! I had to go back and watch the first part again. To get the interaction with the teacher and students like you did is really awesome!
L … Seven Hunnid on UA-cam is way better cuh 55
This is fantastic info, thank you so much Anming. I'm trying to collect as much useful, exciting and interesting info as I can for my nephew. He loves everything Japanese, and we really want him to go and live there and experience life before he gets to stuck into 'adult' life and constraints. Your videos are great. Thanks 😊
I’m so glad you found it useful! I hope it helps your nephew.
After studying in Tokyo for a year, I literally wanted to give up on Japanese because I felt so alone in such a big city 😭 I was also extremely KY and didn’t understand how to 空気を読む at all 🥺 buuuut after studying in Shanghai, I made friends with Japanese classmates from kansai and gave Japanese another try~~ and fell in love all over again by experiencing the countryside communities!! 💕💕 Japan is really beautifully diverse like you said, and I really wish I’d seen this video 5 years ago and knew that Tokyo isn’t the only part of Japan!! ❤️❤️❤️ thank you so much for this!! ✨✨
I felt a bit alone too, but it got a lot better when I started doing language exchange after class.
Anming, This experience is so precious for others to experience and read about! If you share these encounters of others who have broken through the cultural barriers of learning a language, you are doing a great service to others! The kendo, the archery, Chado, etc, that others outside of Japan have come to experience and love and have internalized for themselves represent a form of internal mastery that, to me, are the keys to learning and loving a language and the people who speak it.❤️💝🙏
Thank you so much! I’ll have a horseback archery video coming out next.
@@OrientalPearl Your work and the role Tommy & his family play in this endeavor is truly a gift to us and a gift to the world!
I’ve had my fair share of strict adults in my life, but Adults and teachers elsewhere like Japan is on another level. I’m American so it’s kinda hard for understand how that strict environment feels.
It feel like elementary school lol. But that depends on the level the company or school wants to take it to.
Japanese, Chinese, other asians don't have that much discipline level if you compare to indian schools, offices.
@ExtremelyOnline Guy Wtf is this comment
@@aaronhawk4493 oh lol now you make me remember my tamil teacher for being damn strict to my poor weak asś mind.
@@Founderschannel123 😁
Omg! This is exactly what I experienced in college with a native Japanese teacher, in my country!! Our class even had to bow in the beginning and at the end of the class!! After one year of learning by that japanese method I can say that I can do the tests ( from 0 to 20 I finished that year with 19) and I can catch some simple conversations and words but if you ask me to talk, I can't!! And my will to go again to college for the second year with the the same teacher is zero! 😅 I'm glad you shared your experience here, I'm feeling better!! Thank you!! 🙏💖😊
Wow, your teacher brought over the Tokyo language school JLPT factory model right to your county lol
@@OrientalPearl 🥲 spreading the culture 😂
My Korean skills are very basic and mostly for survival, my mom and others tried teaching me but their patience only lasted for small stretches. No matter how much I tried to learn, their strict demands were never satisfied. So I can relate to the brain fart moments trying to communicate with native speakers, the pressure, ugh!
When you hit a plateau, double your study time for 3 months and watch your progress take off.
I passed for that when I moved to germany for half an year. I could understand people if they were not speed talking, but the pressure of talking correctly made me freeze.
I'm learning Japanese and Korean as a Pole. I love both cultures. I hope I can visit those amazing countries in the future. ♥ 🇯🇵 🇰🇷♥
That’s so cool! I’m learning Korean too.
Excellent advice and input! Extremely helpful, and for anyone reading this who may be just starting out - she's a great resource! She's actually in it to help others, and I appreciate the experience being shared. ありがとうございます。
I've been self studying for around 3 years now and recently, I was wondering what it was like to study in the big cities like Tokyo and Osaka and becoming somewhat jealous of people who got the chance to go and do that. However after watching this video I feel glad that I have self studied. I think I pictured such a wonderful image in my head but this video has made me feel more confident not worrying when I do eventually go there. I think many people forget that language is there in order communicate, not to "look good" for tests. Thank you for making video's like this. ✨ありがとうございます🙏
I’m a big proponent of formal language classes, but the point I wanted to make in this video is that there are a lot of Japanese language schools in big cities that are just JLPT score factories. I really got a lot out of the language school in China.
Hi, I am 16 years old and I started to learn Japanese recently, I would like to say that you are a big inspiration for me and I look up to you. It's fascinating how fluent you are speaking Japanese and it makes me look forward and work harder to achieve my goal (which is speaking Japanese). I appreciate your UA-cam videos they are entertaining and somehow it helps me to learn about life in Japan.
Thank you for being an inspiration for my dreams, love u :)
Thanks for your kind words.
I lived in Okinawa for a short summer as an exchange student. I cried like a baby when I had to leave I loved the culture and people so much. I also hosted exchange students from Okinawa for many years here all through high school. I loved the program and wish to go back someday. now Im a dad and so much older , makes things difficult. I love watching your videos because I see and understand so much , the language I have slacked on but I enjoy your content very much and the positive energy you have is always great.
loving the good vibes from the natives hanging out with the foreigners, pure joy.
That’s the best part of all.
This is actually how we were taught English at school in my country (Spain), especially the recorded tape exercises... 😭😅
I can imagine! That’s enough to make kids not like studying English lol
@@OrientalPearl that is how we used to also in Malaysia, but now not that much.
Same in France. I was always sleeping in the back of the class during the class. I learned English with Jrpg translated. Nonsense XD
This has to be one of your top 10 videos ever made! Not only entertaining but highly informative! Well done!
Yay! Happy to see you again! Also LOL I was just thinking about studying Japanese 😂😂😂
You should!
I have been to a language school in Osaka from 2014-2016 and had a fantastic time. We also had loads of people from Europe and America. It was friendly and not exhaustingly strict. We were only allowed to talk in Japanese, had presentations in Japanese and always used what we learned immediately as well as Kanji tests every Friday. I also felt very connected with everyone. After we had completed a "semester" we would always go to eat and sing Karaoke together as a class including Teachers. There was plenty of time to talk with each other, we were allowed to drink during classes and you properly learned Japanese if you put the work into it. For those still getting used to talking in Japanese they also had Japanese people come to the school which you could talk to in Japanese. And people are more open than the other big cities in Osaka. It's all about how willing you are to accustom and open up. I would never want to trade the experience I had there for somewhere else to be honest. But of course it's up to if you want to live somewhere in the nature or in the city of course.
Hey,
Can u tell me to which school you went?
I'm currently searching for a good school. But most of them have like bad reviews and I'm a bit scared of picking the wrong one.
I also really want to go to Osaka due to food and the more friendlier atmosphere. I had found the Daiwa academy. But it has also like a lot of negative reviews :/
@@VoggoSama Unfortunately it seems like the one in Osaka doesn't exist anymore(merged with the one in Kyoto or something like that), however they also have locations in Kyoto, Tokyo and Shinjuku. The schools are all called ARC Academy + the city name!
I know how much time and effort you always put into making your delightful videos.
**WATCHED + APPRECIATED**
Thank you so much! This one took about 3 days to film and 30 hours to edit lol
Man, I didn’t know that a 10min video could take so much time to produce. Thanks for all the effort and hard work.
You are Right about that. A big city like New York City, Singapore, Chicago, Manila, Philadelphia, Seoul, and London are all the same. The people don't care about anyone but themselves. But the people who are far out of the city are so pleasant to be around.
I love your DITL and Japanese culture vlogs was so excited to see a new upload from you. Jo 🙂 x
Yay! Thank you!
The dog attack was ADORABLE!
I know right! That was totally unexpected too.
I can't thank you enough for mentioning Pimsleur in a previous video!! Until then I'd been learning Korean with LingoDeer and the TTMIK books. Since downloading Pimsleur I've come on SO much from the audio lessons!! I do each lesson twice and I'm on 26 now. I'm going to keep doing this til I can get a one on one, in-person tutor (kinda hard at the mo!). Watching your videos reminds me to keep going! 👊
Loved this vid as always
I’m go glad to hear that it has helped you so much! I really got a lot from their Japanese program and am now using it to learn Korean. Progressive overload will keep you moving up to higher levels. You’re smart to add in tutoring. If you hit a plateau, which we all do, increase your study time or double for 3 months and see your progress skyrocket.
"I'm the master" Akita runs almost pulling you over 😂😂
I'm in love with the countryside of Japan especially Hokkaido and the Ainu are so fascinating. Hokkaido is so beautiful when I do virtual tours. I particularly like the view of Sapporo at night from MT Moiwa. I love snowy japan !
I want to go to Hokkaido
I worked in northern Hokkaido 32 years ago, mostly in Teshikaga, while there for 3 months working on a geophysical survey crew. I enjoyed listening and learning to speak Japanese by going to my favorite snack bar every night. Since most Japanese I met there didn't speak English, it forced me to rapidly learn to understand and attempt to speak Japanese. I fell in love with Japan and I tearfully left 3 months later when our survey was completed. I still miss Japan, Enka music and a beautiful woman named Yumiko to this day!
Love seeing ur videos! Thanks for continuing to make them :)
More coming soon for you Bailey.
I get asked all the time why I want to learn Japanese, as it’s not as needed in the big cities. But, that’s the thing! I don’t want to go just to see the city, I want to go to the countryside and ACTUALLY see Japan ❤️
Cause i dont know. Thats the native language and would be way easier to get around knowing Japanese.
Really interesting the differences from Tokyo!
That part of Japan looks so beautiful ~ Great Video Anming 🌸🌸
Thank you very much!
This is a great video! But I’d like to offer a different perspective. For someone like Oriental Pearl, indeed, you’re going to have a rough time and probably dislike it somewhere like Tokyo. But if you’re like me, you’ll appreciate the way things are. I am American but I grew up in the city and had that tunnel vision, work and no play-focused mindset. I came to Japan to work and I’m learning the language to do so (albeit through a university, not language school but very similar teaching styles here to what she is describing) so I’m not here to have fun necessarily. If you are like me, you might enjoy Tokyo and other cities, too! There is such a wonderful structure that gives me peace of mind. That said, the whole practicing talking part is a huge problem. Our classes are a bit better about practicing speaking but I still feel like it’s not enough.
this video fills my soul :') country folk are all the same all around the world. they always value family & bonds, and going out to Japan, & Korea to the countryside/less densely populated areas its precisely how you described it. i liked tokyo, and heck i like most cities i've traveled to... but the one thing ive noticed about all big major cities, is that theres something desensitized about them. its not always the same thing in each city but, it always feels like theres something they lack. maaaan now im going to gear up for another trip to japan!
Awesome advice Anming. I never liked classroom learning like that. I had a lot strict teachers in my day. I don’t think I could put up with that now.
Love your videos!
I enjoy classroom learning, but it has to be a small classroom for language learning. Gotta have a chance to practice speaking and get corrected.
Alright. You got me. I’m going to give Pimsleur a try with Korean. I agree with a lot of what you said regarding Tokyo schools. I first went to Genki JACs which is actually meant for westerners and doesn’t fit what you described but they only go to a low intermediate level. If you want to go higher it’s not a touristy school but one just like you talked about. I was the only the western person in my class (learning JLPT N2 level). Chinese students everywhere. Not the ones that speak English either. They were friendly but we had a real language barrier and they weren’t so serious about Japanese that they would switch to Japanese just for me. A lot of them did sleep in class or play on their phones instead of participating. I thought they were rude and it made me not want to go to class. The kid sitting next to me in class paid no attention and I assumed his Japanese was bad but in fact although he didn’t speak it he was quite literate and able to answer any test question perfectly I later found out. Still not a good environment at all. I would rather go to the country where you filmed this video. The sledding and skiing looks great.
That’s so interesting that you had a similar experience. I ended up making friends with the Chinese students in my class, but like you said they spoke Chinese most of the time instead of Japanese. I’m using Pimsleur for Korean now too. It gave me a great start with Japanese back in 2015. I’m enjoy the learning process all over again. Please come back and give updates on your progress. I’d love to hear them.
This is so interesting and informative video for the students who wanna to study in Japan like me ✋😊 The teachers are so serious and I think this is the main reason why students are so disciplined :)
I hope you have a chance to come to Japan!
@@OrientalPearl OMG hope ur words come true as soon 😭💖 I will definitely meet you when I will visit Japan
One of my main concerns is not being able to talk or make sentences in Japanese. I'm on N4 and the whole time I had classes we would religiously follow the Minna no Nihongo textbooks and maybe change a few things/make our own example sentences here and there. The japanese teacher tried to get us to talk, but we were only confident enough to repeat はい、いいえ。It wasn't a language school in Japan, but in my home country and the teacher are amazing people, but there should be more output encouragement( like there was with the other languages I've studied).
Oriental Pearl is a mind reader. I’ve been wondering what you thought about the Akita Language School. I really like how they do things differently
No way! You must have seen other videos on it.
@@OrientalPearl yes indeed, I first learned about the school from John Daub, and another UA-camr Life Where I’m From! I always thought learning in the countryside you could actually practise your Japanese in more real life situations so you could therefore learn way more Japanese in the long run! Thank you for doing a video on the Akita School 💜
Great vid. Thanks for all the tips about exploring outside of Tokyo. I only had time to explore Tokyo last time I went to Japan, but I absolutely loved it. Really looking forward to checking out the rest of Japan!
You’ll love the countryside!
I had teachers like that in high school almost but it became quite relaxed in college. it was a shock in one of my classes to see my professor dressed completely casually with long hair and beard and addressing the class in street talk and slang.
Japanese universities are a lot more relaxed too.
I remember hearing one of my college prof's swear on the first day of class, mind blowing way to start higher education hahahaha
I remember teachers and parents in the US warning me about how college would be hard and to study really hard to be able to keep up in college, and then I found that a good handful of the teachers weren't even professors, and some were more casual and less organized than expected. Then again it depends on what college you go to and what you major in too
What a great summary of language schools in Tokyo! I lived in Tokyo for three years and then moved to Nagoya for seven and my language abilities increased simply by getting out of Tokyo! That was back in the ancient days, 1988-1998. But my experience was the same. Good luck as you continue to learn and inspire others!
Standard Asian school rules. Nothing out of the ordinary. Can be difficult for Westerners to adjust.
yeah lol
Half of it seems to be a test of whether or not you fit in well enough. The other half is pretty reasonable.
Wow the teaching/education approach is so different. Akita looks like such a beautiful and great place to go learn Japanese language.
Yeah, I’ve never seen a school like this.
Another great video. I find this true in every nation I've visited. The further away you get from the big city, the more down to earth friendly people you find that are just as curious about you as you are about them. Every port we visited in the military, my friends and I would always head to the most remote locations to truly experience the people. As a side benefit, meals and such are much cheaper also lol My only caution is to use common sense and place safety first and read up on an area before you go there.
Wise Traveller.
Exactly. That’s why I love making videos in the countryside.
I have watched many videos of yours, but this one is the best of all. Really touched me.
i love your channel!!
and thats sad that theyre so strict😂😂😂
Yeah, and I've seen some really great Japanese teachers outside of Japan. The system is against them.
@@OrientalPearl oof, thats sad..
We need daily videos
Can’t get enough of these vids ❣️❣️
Wow you’re the 2nd UA-camr who knows Japanese that went to Akira and gave us a snippet of a different language school atmosphere. That looks fun & you get to know the people there as you mentioned & Japanese people living in that beautiful city. I love that you showed the difference of Akira compare to the other school you went to that you were mentioning. As someone who doesn’t mind strict teachers but like the challenge, I don’t know if I can survive no drinking water for a hour and a half 😅 As a friend says I’m a fish I need to drink water very often.
Kemushichan went twice, but she hasn’t been able to post the 2nd video. She’s a friend of mine.
Love Who You Are. Keep On Keeping On, Sweet Heart Oriental Pearl!!!
You Rock! 60 plus years ole, I so much enjoy your sharing.
Love & Blessing, Cin
I remember when I was going into my very first year of high school here in america I saw that the school offered chinese (mandarin and cantonese) as an elective class that you could enroll into and take. I was very fortunate enough to have such an opportunity and immediately enrolled to take all four years of chinese language class. It was hands down my most favorite and loved class to attend as it was something I was genuinely passionate and determined to learn. It's truly a shame that the bigger schools in bigger cities like tokyo have that bad policy of not allowing teachers to engage more with their students and it comes off as disconnecting and robotic. To have that extra engagement and getting to know your teachers really helps so much in the learning process more than I can express. My chinese teacher was very laid back, awesome, and overall just a cool person to talk to about all sorts of nerd stuff and chinese culture as a whole.
Whenever anyone had trouble with traditional characters or pronunciation he would take time to help people one on one and was extremely patient with folks learning speed. He commanded great respect in the classroom from everyone and when he had to get serious and firm he'd do it and explained to us that it was time to stop goofing off and focus and learn so we can understand the material at hand. He was genuinely a great teacher and I can attest that what pearl says is true. When teachers engage more with their students, get to know them more and put more personal investment as a whole into helping their students learn another language it just hits differently and helps you as the student in the long term. Sadly my lao-shi had to retire and I still thank him to this day for all that he taught me and for never giving up on me and kept helping me to learn chinese. I'm very much looking forward to the day soon when I go to japan myself to attend language school and keep working hard on and learning and improving my japanese language skills.
I’m so glad that you enjoyed your school! I really liked my Chinese language school, but not the Japanese one in Tokyo so much. Seemed like a factory for producing JLPT scores rather than actually teaching Japanese.
@@OrientalPearl Thank you and yeah for sure it was a great class to take and easily one of the best memories I have attending high school. Yeah I've heard a lot of folks say that as well about much bigger schools in those types of bigger cities not being as good and are more by the numbers just trying to get tons of people through for those proficiency tests like in and out without as much investment. That's why I'm looking for a smaller school in japan with smaller class sizes and I'm taking time to consider which one I want to attend in the next couple of years.
Yay yaaaay, sit down and chat with Anming. Absolutely loved it 💞
This is the content everyone loves. Especially the academically inclined ones like me. BTW your eyes seem bluer than ever!
I’m glad that you liked this video. Good lighting lol
8:16 to 8:23 . You NAILED it. I've been wanting to go to Japan my entire life (yes, since I was 5) and everytime someone asks me if I would like to go to Tokyo or Kyoto or Osaka, I say NO.... I mean, I would obviously like to visit but I don't want to go to Japan to be a tourist, I want to live there and what you said in those 7 seconds of this video is the EXACT same thing that I've been telling everyone when I have a conversation about going to Japan. I'd love to live in a quiet little town such as Chichibu in Saitama or near the beach in Kunisaki, Oita for example and be part of the life and the people that live there, not in some big city where people are stuck to stressful routines and where I'll just be another meaningless gaijin. And yes, when it comes to finishing my studies of the language, I would NOT like to do it in a big city and your video just confirmed why.
If you think about it, it makes sense: Schooling was tailored for war and hasn’t been revamped much until very recently (though most schools are still very traditional)
I watched a video about a japanese mechanic for a large company, and I thought his life seemed pretty war like as well. They stood in ranks, did stretches, and wear clean uniforms. Being spartan has its pros and cons, other countries are like that too in different ways.
One of the most beautiful and useful videos I’ve seen about Japan, I want to go to Japan and learn the language, I didn’t know about Akita!thank you so much for the advice! 🙏🏻
This reminds me of my time in a Japanese language school. One of my classmates got scolded quite severely. Why? He had charged his phone at school. Or as the teachers put it; "He is stealing the schools electricity!" Never mind that we all were paying customers right?
Big classes where you couldn't hear yourself think during practice, overworked teachers under immense pressure from the school president etc. I wasn't really impressed and I kind of lost my passion for a bit after returning home. (Thankfully only three months).
I regained my passion after finding some nice teachers on Italki and taking a hold of my studies on my own. I've learned more, met fun people (and some weird ones too) at a fraction of the price. I will say though, it was a nice, intense start to learning the language. Not worth the price though.
I'm so glad that people like you give people a different perspective on people from different countries, and learning about their languages. Thanks for the video. 👍
Thank you for mentioning all aspects of Japan. I try to avoid watching too much of westerner stuff because I'm from East Europe and my reasons for coming to Japan is exactly the reasons people from other asian countries have because eastern europe has poverty and war and different mindset than west europe or america so thank you for thinking of others and educating everyone. Also the education in my country is pretty much the same like in the Tokyo schools, except there is nothing else here and it's even more rushed.
What a great video. As a linguist currently considering a teaching role in an international school in Yokohama, your comments really resonate with me. Japanese will be the 10th language I've interacted with over my life, with varying facility in each one and nothing close to fluency in any but 2 of those, and I completely agree that learning a language is far more than just memorizing text to pass the test. At any age, language learning is hard work, and you have to offset this with moments of fun and authentic engagement. I will look up the Akita school if my job becomes a reality.
Am studying Portuguese and it's difficult not having anyone around to talk with in that language. The learning process would be faster if I had Portuguese speakers all over the place. You have beautiful eyes @Oriental Pearl
Try downloading the app Hellotalk and find language exchange partners to practice with.
@@OrientalPearl I was just about to recommend that! Try using the bulletin feature to announce when you have free time. You'll have more Portuguese speakers than you can shake a stick at.
I have also heard that most japanese just go each other out of the way, to not to bother or not to be bothered by someone, they are always busy, workaholic, strict, all that stuff, but it's great to see more life outside of the big cities, it was nice to see you guys laughing together, playing and having fun, like having some connection or even friendships and that other people did not seem that strict or serious, I mean, they seemed quite warm hearted, also able to have fun all together. Maybe many tourists judge only from their experiences in big busy cities and it really depends where you are and whom you meet
For someone who has been self learning since 2020, I'm glad I didn't ever go to language classes, mostly because I like self learning not just in languages, so I have a lot more fun like this. Of course, I never really get chances to speak but I know I won't have to struggle too much when I do.
Self study is a great way to start for the first 3-6 months. But after that structure, goals, and a little competition is necessary to propel your studies. The classroom can provide that.
I think a mix for formal learning and self study is the best way to go. But a bad school limits the gains from formal learning.
Anming, you inspire us all! You're an awesome content creator and you always make me want to stop what I'm doing and learn a new language!
That’s makes me so happy to hear! Good luck with your studies.
I actually had a really great experience studying at a language school in Tokyo - I think it really depends on the school you choose to study at! A lot of people that I met in Japan were in rigorous language programs because many of the schools want you to pass the JLPT as quickly as possible and start work or attend vocational school. So if that isn't your end goal, then it's important to do some research on the school you go to! Because even "relaxed schools" are still fully immersive, which is a teaching style that takes some time to get used to if you haven't experienced it before.
I would also go drinking at izakayas with classmates and teachers after classes, so there are schools that are super relaxed in Tokyo!
***don't want to do too much self-promo, but I have videos about my experiences in japan on my channel too if anyone is interested :)***
Thanks for sharing your experience. I wanted to go to a school call ISI and Ohana in Ikebukuro, but they were always full. A smaller class size would have solved most of the complaints I had.
@@OrientalPearl Oh for sure! My school was called Shibuya Gaigo Gakuen and class sizes were pretty small. It would be super overwhelming with large class sizes, basically just a college lecture at that point. I think the only "complaint" from my experience is that conversation was pushed a lot, but that didn't leave much time for reading and writing, so while my conversation excelled, I didn't really get much experience in kanji and writing. Those things can be perfected individually as long as you have the time and motivation though, but the JLPT is reading and writing focused sooo x.x
Akita looks so cool though~! Definitely a different experience from Tokyo!
@@OrientalPearl I went to ISI in Takadanobaba. Some of what you said rings true, but in general I had a great experience.
@@K0nc3pt10n This is interesting, if you don't mind what do you think made your experience different? Were you more okay with handling the strict atmosphere?
So a little late to the party, but this is true. Thousands of dollars for the school I went to in the hot summer of Japan in Tokyo, and the school was... painful! Yes, I am still moving to go there soon, but that school was very painful because they did tests and strictness. I won't go into complete details, but the strict testing system and painfully hard teaching methods were very hard. I passed, but barely. Sadly, my school was better than some schools I have heard about. It's unfortunate. Anyway, language school outside of big cities sounds nice. I'd suggest it.
This video put a smile on my face, recent times have been worrying and sad because of the situation in Europe. So thank you for cheering me up, beating that dough with a big hammer looked like a fun way to make food. Stay safe on the sled hill! :D
I’m glad that this video cheered you up a little.
@@OrientalPearl That's what I needed, thanks!
I need an 1 hour version of this video, i really like it, dude i have been learning the language for two years an half and i have to tell you jsut like when i started to learn it, like with english for the firts time and when you gradually are reaching the point where you are able to undertand the conversations as well to read it the feeling its so gratifiying. I hope to being able to travel to japan one day to so far in the future.
I would have loved to make it longer and I have a lot more to say about this topic, unfortunately the average watch time from viewers was just over 3 minutes.
Pearl I love ur videos, and you inspired me to practice Japanese tysm
I'm so glad!
@@OrientalPearl
Ahh!! Seeing you snowboarding was *so cool*!! This was a great one!!
I can't imagine anyone hating you! Your sweetness comes through! Thank you beautiful lady!!
😊 thank you
I have just found your channel ,thank you UA-cam recommend ,now I’m binge watching all your videos 😊
Thank you for watching so many videos.
4:00 *Akita fluff attack!* 🤣
Anyway, not being allowed to drink anything in class was all the schools I went to. And even in highschool, that was also 90 minute classes. And as for tests and such, the school was also pretty strict, so none of those are really a problem.
If only I could take that doggie back to Tokyo. My apartment is too small.
@@OrientalPearl well that's a major shame. Sucks actually. It's a really beautiful dog.
I feel sorry for you for the experience you had of Tokyo. I lived there for a year and I have never met so many warm, caring and loving people before. But it's good you found your place in Japan because it's a wonderful and varied country with just as wonderful and varied people 💕
I think that I will buy the course if it's 50% off! When Japan will open Its borders again i want to come to Japan and do a 1 month intensive course to see if I really can pursue my dream, teaching English and Italian in Japan. I wanted to go to Tokyo because I went there in 2019 and it was pretty cool but now I'm doubting it might be not a good idea in the long run. Maybe I should try to stay there 1 month and see how it works with me. After that I can take the 6 months visa and change location. My goal is to take a n3 certificate to be able to study and live in Japan. I'm studying Japanese since the beginning of 2020 (currently a2)
Give it a go! They did a nice job with it. It’s good to have diversity in your learning. I’ve done multiple programs with multiple publishers and lessons.
I've been an exchange student at Yamanashi University in Koufu for a year. Got along well with the Japanese teachers but what really helped me was the contact with the German teachers. I joined the classes and tried to help as much as I could and afterwards we started doing a "language evening". Which involved talking about anything basically in Japanese or German and eating and drinking a lot. Fun days.
SUCH GREAT FOOTAGE!! Freaking Tokyo, sooo uptight. They need to chill and get over themselves. The countryside is waaaayyy better in Japan to live, work and study in
Yeah, I felt a little sad when I waved to all those people and got ignored completely. 😂
@@OrientalPearl yeah that broke my heart too!! and thanks for always replying to my comments. deeply appreciate it :) love these videos
I totally agree with this video. I studied for one year in a japanese school in Tokyo, and after i graduated, I felt like it was a total waste of my money. I learned more by myself or at work than in the school.
I think people being friendlier in the country side as opposed to big cities is the norm in a lot of places. It's like that in the US too. As an American and Japanese hafu, I had a very strange experience when I was in 2nd grade going to a Japanese school in Tokyo. The teacher was teaching the class basic English words (which obviously I knew). She knew I spoke English and wanted me to correct her if she mispronounced or misspelled any words.
Yeah most any country you go to is the same in that way. The people in the countryside are much friendlier.
@@snowdog03 who sounds American?
@@snowdog03 oh okay. Didn’t know there was another comment but yes Pearl is from the US.
awesome video!!! thanks you it was very refreshing to hear your opinion :D
How would you describe language schools in Osaka in comparison? Heading out this month and pretty anxious tbh now that I waited a few years just to get started. Thanks for the video Oriental Pearl :)
she explained EXACTLY what I went through in Osaka back in 2012
Exactly the same LOL
@@OrientalPearl dang, hopefully its school by school basis.
@@theoc007 I honestly think it's more of a cultural thing based on old school mentality. Education is like being in the military without the guns but just as much stress. lol. It MIGHT be different with individual teachers in some big cities though. But I was in Osaka for 3 years and Noda for 1 year ... Noda almost feels like it's in the middle of nowhere compared to Osaka but it's almost as if my teacher was a clone of two of my old ones. lol
@@Haywood-Jablomie military life is what I grew up on along with serving so it might be alright to deal with. Did you ever find good opportunities while living in Japan by chance?
I keep watching him drop the mochi. It’s hysterical 😭
you misunderstood 1 thing pearl. japanese school doesnt just teach you language but also their culture as well. when the teacher scolded you, it was part of their tradition and part of the school's regulations.
Great point. It is also training to become a low-level Japanese employee and follow the rules.
@Redice1202 interesting point...
@Redice1202 If you're going to language classes with all Chinese classmates, congratulations you're heading to the bottom of the workforce in Japan. Your classmates are trainees and are happy just to have a chance to make it in Japan. And yes, Japanese people are socialized in this way from elementary school, though increasing numbers drop out/reject it and corporate life entirely.
Do what OP recommends and find classes at a proper university or non-profit language school and you might not get treated like an elementary school student and if you have actual skills to back up your attitude you might just make it here (I did.)
@@rsmith02 Great points
Oriental Pearl, you are incredibly charming, and FUNNY, but what’s more, this video is wonderfully informative. I learned things from it, while simultaneously being entertained. You have a way of communicating aspects of Japan that shows insight and understanding.
2:30 5 sec rule, that's fine.
Ha ha, that's right! We brushed it off anyway.
Another great video!! Thanks for posting! Japan is my one item on my bucket list. South Vietnam is on my husband's. Something's gotta give.
Well, this is interesting. I'm surprised that you are surprised. I'm in my 60's, but whenever a college professor (I'm emeritus) or employer told me to do, or not do something, that was it. I finished law school a few years ago and yes, drinking, bathroom breaks, hats, colored pens, were often forbidden. There were even professors checking to see if periods and commas were appropriately italicized or not. Take a bar exam and you'll be forbidden mechanical pencils, liquids other than water and whatever else that jurisdiction happens to prohibit. I took language classes in Europe both at private schools and in adult ed. settings and I did notice a difference between them. One of the things I've enjoyed in Japan and in other countries is adapting to the etiquette, culture and customs. If it wasn't different that what you experienced in the past, what would be the value in it. That's diversity. Vive la difference.
This was so informative and fun to watch! Definitely makes me want to, at the very least, visit the area some day.
I’m really glad that you got something out of it. 😊
Wrong
I live in Japan have study Japanese in Osaka an I had wonderful experience. We laughed a lot an till now after 9 years I still freind with teachers.
Your its only yours stop making it the truth.
Don't bulshit other with your own standard
She isn't wrong, she just has a different perspective. The facts she gave were not wrong, and neither were her feelings about how things were done. Don't assume and invalidate others based on your own experience. It's rather self centered...
Great advice; Akita is an amazing place with amazing people and some of the best food in Japan. Quite cold in winter but absolutely beautiful.
So because this happened to you, you are painting all schools with the same brush
it didn't happen to you? what was your experience?
Referring to one of your previous videos that showed clips of people hating on you and your channel, I don't understand why. It's videos like these that I really enjoy and it's goofy that anybody wouldn't enjoy these videos. I think it would be cool to see a full length video on your snowboarding adventure. Keep on being awesome.
I think it just comes with reaching a large audience. That’s a sign that the influence of the channel is quite large.
you should respect the rules of japan .
LOVE IT OR LEAVE IT .
Everthing she said is right. You don't have to love everything about a country. She still respects Japan.
@@maikeengel4171 also foreigners in america are right when they say that Americans are racists - violent - rude - haters .............extra
but you do not accept that from them
and keep saying to them :
LOVE IT OR LEAVE IT .
@@vvs2811 Yes because it is true too NO country is perfect!
@@maikeengel4171 but her complaints against japan are not on negative behaviors .
she was complaining on positive rules such as : you can't drink water while you are in the class - you should not make friendship with your teacher ...............extra but the problem of Americans and westerners that they keep complaining and annoying on anything in every country they visit as they want to say : we will not obey and respect your rules and we want to do whatever we want because we are westerners but in the same time when you come to our country ( america & Europe ) you should obey our rules even if it's negative and even if you faced racism or violence and if you did not like that then LOVE IT OR LEAVE IT .
Damn . I have never seen filthy arrogant racist and bloody people like the filthy westerners .
@@vvs2811 you are racist
and can't get over the fact that not everyone "LOVES" everything about Japan 👏
I learned something new and interesting today . Thank you so much for always sharing your first hand experiences with us ✨♥️
first comment!!!!
@@ryancarpenter4834 🥺😔sorry
Just missed it lol
lol
Fantastic! What you say about Tokyo and Japan being so very different is so true of so many countries. I live in London, UK ... my brother came to visit once then he went and spent time in the Scottish countryside - in the end he said "I like Scotland much more than England".. but I was quick to point out he'd never been to England.. he'd only been to London :-D
I really wish I had your courage to go out there. Been stuck in one place my whole life, right now supporting family and such, it's hard to leave. I don't even have like a wife or kids but it's still hard to get the courage to leave and if your leaving would put others, you're supporting at a disadvantage you really don't want to leave so you feel stuck. So I just resort to watching people in UA-cam channels like this and dream. I've tried learning Japanese but kind of discouraged at the fact that i'll never move to Japan and not really any Japanese speaker i know in USA to make it worth it, i may end up learning Spanish instead as at least that's useful at work here in Florida.
Great stuff Anming. We really enjoy your videos. You're just so personable and down to earth, it's a pleasure to watch. We really enjoy a glimpse into other places and cultures.
Thank you so much! I’m really glad to hear that.