N1 listening score
The calculation method of N1 score is as follows:
text grammar question 4.7 is divided into two parts, others are divided into one part, the total score is divided by 56 and then multiplied by 60
questions 10 and 13 in the reading part are one-third questions, and the others are two-thirds questions. It's useless if you don't multiply it. Just calculate the total score.
for the listening part, two points and one point. Three is two, four is one and five is three. Divide the total score by 57 and multiply by 60
that's it. All items should be higher than 19. You should know that 100 passes
I hope it can help you.
however, it is said that the new evaluation system calculates the score according to the difficulty of the topic, so no one can tell until the final result is achieved
there is a saying:
if you answer the right question with a high score, or only 10% of the people answer the right question, then your score will be higher
so this is just an estimate.
the score standard of the new ability test is not a fixed score per question, but a dynamic calculation method. In short, those who have solid knowledge score high. You can't get many points by guessing a few questions correctly. You can't do the basic ones. Even if the problem is right, the score is not high.
The total score of N1 is 180, 100 is qualified and 57 is qualified
The N1 test includes language knowledge, reading and listening, with a full score of 180, a passing score of 100 and at least 19 points in each subject. The requirement of N1 test is to master a high degree of Japanese grammar, with 2000 Chinese characters and about 10000 words, and to have a barrier free life or work in Japanese society, as well as the level of Japanese required for learning in University test time:
starting from 2009, the Japanese proficiency test will be held twice a year and implemented on the first Sunday of July and December respectively
Listening: the first part is "vocabulary", which is divided into four parts: the first part is 6 "Chinese pronunciation", the second part is 7 "meaning", the third part is 6 "synonyms", and the fourth part is 6 "usage" Grammar: the second part is "grammar", which is divided into three parts. The first part is 10 "grammar choices", the second part is 5 "sentence formation", and the third part is 5 "grammar in the article" Vocabulary: the first part is "vocabulary", which can be divided into four parts. The first part is 6 "Chinese pronunciation", the second part is 7 "meaning", the third part is 6 "synonyms", and the fourth part is 6 "usage"source of reference: Internet Japanese Proficiency Test
dect 3x13 = 39, and you can get 61 points left
you'd better ask your Japanese teacher
The single item scores of Japanese N1 are "language knowledge (words, vocabulary, grammar)", "reading" and "listening"
The specific score and qualified score are shown in the table below:
the new Japanese proficiency test is to evaluate whether it is qualified or not through the comprehensive score and the passing score of each indivial score. That is to say, the comprehensive score must be above the qualified score, and each single score must be above the passing score set by each single score to be regarded as qualified. The total examination time is 170 minutes
the official hasn't given any information yet
