kareman wrote:You know what? I'm a bit sick and tired of people saying that there is no point in sitting level three, except for its motivational value. I find that this kind of comment not only undervalues all the hard work people put in to passing this level (which is no walk in the park, btw), but it is also grossly untrue. Ok, so maybe level 3 won't guarantee you a job in Japan (not that level 2 does!), but in my personal opinion, if I was looking at the CVs of two people applying for a job, and one said they were able to speak Japanese and the other said they had an internationally recognised qualification proving they were at an intermediate level, I'd be much more impressed by the one with proof. Sure, sitting level 3 is largely motivational, but as someone who has just studied their ass off and passed, I think it does has some real tangible value as well.
Congratulations on passing the test!
I'm still waiting for my results. You're right about the way we talk about the JLPT devaluing the effort you've put into studying and passing the exam, but I don't think that's anyone's intenet.
I tell people that it's not worth it except for motivational value, because the test is a horrible experience throughout the entire 6 month application, test-taking, waiting for the results process. It was hell from beginning to end, and I just don't think it's worth it at the lower-levels... the potential benefits aren't worth the effort. If you're hoping to get a job with only 3-kyu level, I'd imagine that it's going to be your awesome conversational skills that tip the balance more than the JLPT certificate.
In addition, it's not really a great indicator of proficiency (not that there are a lot of other choices).
Not saying that it's a bad choice to take the exams. Although, a bad choice would be studying solely for the exams. Which is actually my issue with taking 1kyu next year, I feel like I'll be studying grammar for the next 8 months, and not be developing my conversational skills.
And I might disagree about JLPT being an "internationally recognized qualification", there are a lot of people here in Japan who don't know what the JLPT is.