Cazările la casă oferă studenţilor şansa de a învăţa mai multe despre cultura locală într-un decor comfortabil cât timp studiază Japoneză în Fukuoka. Acele case sunt situate de regulă la distanţe între 40 - 90 de minute de şcoală, utilizând transportul în comun. Familiile asigură de regulă mese mai ieftine, iar în acelaşi timp mai abordabile, bazate pe felurile locale. Dacă aveţi cereri speciale sau restricţii în ceea ce priveşte dieta (din cauza religiei sau probleme de sănătate), vă rugăm să ne aduceţi la cunoştinţă acest lucru dinainte. Your housing starts on the Sunday before your first day of class and ends on the Saturday after your last day of class, unless otherwise noted. Learn more about homestay housing
Căminele studenţeşti sunt mai potrivite pentru un student independent, care este în căutarea unei cazări curate, la un preţ economic. Toţi studenţii trebuie să aibe 14 - 19, cu excepţia cazului în care se menţionează vârsta. Your housing starts on the Sunday before your first day of class and ends on the Saturday after your last day of class, unless otherwise noted. Learn more about student residence accommodation
Este posibil să locuiţi într-un apartament închiriat pe durata studiilor în Fukuoka, dar de regulă este mult mai costisitor. GenkiJACS asigură cât de cât o asistenţă în ceea ce priveşte închirierea apartamentelor, sau puteţi chiar dumneavoastră să închiriaţi un apartament. Învaţă mai mult despre cazarea în apartament.
GenkiJACS este situat în inima orașului Fukuoka, cel mai mare oraș din sudul Japoniei. Orașul are o populație de 1,4 milioane de locuitori, iar aeroportul său internațional îl transformă într-un centru important care leagă Japonia de restul Asiei și nu numai. Este mai cald decât în mare parte a Japoniei și este singurul oraș din Japonia continentală cu plaje frumoase la marginea orașului, la doar 10 minute de la școală!
Școala se află chiar în centrul orașului, la câțiva pași de sute de magazine, restaurante, karaoke și tot ce ai nevoie. Suntem, de asemenea, situați chiar deasupra unuia dintre cele mai mari magazine de manga / anime din Japonia!
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if the students are complete beginners at the start, generally it would not be possible to reach pre-intermediate level in just 8 weeks of study (and only 4 weeks in Japan). The general guideline is that completing beginner-level study (i.e. passing the high beginner Japanese exam) requires 500-750 hours of study, whereas their requested study program only includes 160 class hours. Even including roughly two hours of homework per day, this would still only be 240 hours, less than half of the minimum guideline. So it would be important to manage their expectation. For this length of study, it should be possible to finish the low beginner course, equivalent to completing the Genki 1 textbook: http://genki.japantimes.co.jp/about_en/about03_en. If they were to study for 30 hours per week, this would be 240 class hours. With 3 hours of homework per day (9 hours language learning per day, quite a tough schedule!), this would be 360 hours of study total, which would put them over halfway through the high beginner course. This covers most of the basics of simple Japanese for everyday life. Given that these students would be studying as a closed group, we would adapt
the materials to their needs, so I think it should be possible to complete the full beginner course (both low and high). This would be equivalent to passing the JLPT N4 level, defined as:
*Elementary Level*: The ability to understand basic Japanese.
*Reading*: One is able to read and understand passages on familiar daily topics written in basic vocabulary and kanji.
*Listening*: One is able to listen and comprehend conversations encountered in daily life and generally follow their contents, provided that they are spoken slowly.
In 20 weeks, at 30 hours per week, this would amount to 600 class hours, plus at least another 300 homework hours, making close to 1000 study hours total. This would take them well into intermediate ability level, which means sufficient Japanese for daily life.
Yes, we usually do not allow minors to stay in any other
accommodation types except homestay, so private apartment will not be
possible. Additionally, they may only study at our Fukuoka school.
Dormitory in Tokyo means shared rooms (versus guesthouse/residence
offering private rooms). In Fukuoka we offer private rooms only (listed
as guesthouse/residence), mostly because accommodation costs are cheaper
in Fukuoka and most students prefer private rooms anyway. The main dormitory/residence that we use doesn't offer meals - they have
a fully equipped kitchen for student use instead. There is an option to hire a cook to go to
their dorm and make breakfast and dinner for them each day at a set
time. We would of course arrange a cook who can make food according to
their dietary/religious requirements. We've never done something like this
before, so it's tough to make an estimate of the cost right now, but it
should be possible to make it for roughly 1,500 yen per person per day
(both breakfast and dinner). For 20 students for a month (28 days), this
would be 840,000 yen total. Lunch would be from a shop, cafe or
restaurant around school.
No problem for a Polish student to study 12 weeks - he will automatically receive a 3-month visa waiver
when he arrives in Japan. He can extend this for an additional 3 months by leaving Japan once (e.g. to nearbby South Korea), to stay for 6
months total.