Taurus wrote:I think this is a difficult question to answer. Without wishing to take anything away from Japanesepod, it seems to me that the lessons aren't structured around the JLPT syllabus. It seems to me that some of the elements of grammar/vocab etc. introduced early in the podcasts, aren't necessary till later stages of the JLPT, and vice versa. The podcasts seem to have a much greater emphasis on colloquialisms and informal Japanese for example, which will probably be much more help if you're trying to talk to Japanese people than if you're trying to pass the JLPT.
Excellent comments and exactly my experience. Before I studied for the JLPT, I was listening to JPod for a while, and I found it helped progress my speaking Japanese a lot with friends and in-laws, but when I took some JLPT practice tests, I still did poorly. It's just not JPod's emphasis, I hope they keep the format as it is. It's more useful in the long-run. If you integrate JPod though with other teaching aids, then you're in much better shape.
Also, for listening, I've found it helpful to just listen to Japan streaming media daily. I noticed that NNN (Nihon Terebi News) has a daily feed of the evening news, 30 minutes of good, fast, fluent speaking here:
http://www.dai2ntv.jp/news/realtime/streaming/Of course, you're not expected to understand all, or even most of it. But with a lot of common words I study, just hearing them used over and over again in all kinds of different contexts is helpful. My wife told me this story of a celeb who moved to Japan and learned Japanese by watching lots and lots of samurai movies, which sounds funny, but did help (even though they sometimes used outdated vocabulary), but the point was that listening really does take years to master, and you can't cram for it. Instead, frequent and consistent exposure are the key.
For any language, listening is by far the hardest skill, and you just can't memorize your way to success. You just have to get sooooo used to hearing it spoken, that you don't have to expend any extra brain power processing it than you would English. There's no other way, and if you get that good, the JLPT listening section will not be too difficult even with its red-herrings (and they are sneaky).
So the more you listen to Japanese speakers, the more chance you have of doing well in the JLPT.
Amen to that. Exposure, exposure, exposure.