Why You Keep Losing Points on JLPT Listening (and How to Fix It)
Every term I meet students who can read a newspaper but lose half their points on ่ด่งฃ (ใกใใใใ). โI know all these words!โ And that is the heart of the problem: you donโt know a word until you know its sound โ not its spelling.
Why Strong Readers Fail Listening
Reading lets you stop, re-read, and look things up. Listening gives you none of that โ the audio plays once, at natural speed, and moves on. A learner who studied entirely with their eyes has trained the wrong sense.
The fix is not โlisten moreโ in a vague way. It is to attack the five specific reasons points slip away, one at a time.
5 Reasons You Lose Points โ and the Fix
1. You learned words by their spelling, not their sound
You studied ็ ้ข (ใณใใใใ, hospital) and ็พๅฎน้ข (ใณใใใใ, beauty salon) as kanji. But in fast speech they are separated only by vowel length โ one extra beat. If you never trained your ear for length (long vs short vowels, the small ใฃ), these words blur together.
2. Real conversations use contractions you never studied
Textbooks teach ใใฆใใ. The test plays ใใฆใ. They teach ใงใฏ; the audio says ใใ. Natural speech is full of reductions: ใใฆใใโใใจใ, ใใฆใใพใโใใกใใ, ใใชใใใฐโใใชใใ, ใจใใโใฃใฆ.
3. You are translating in your head
If you hear a sentence, translate it to English, then understand it โ you are already three sentences behind. Listening has no rewind button.
4. You freeze on one unknown word
You hit a word you donโt know, panic, and miss the next ten seconds โ which often contained the answer.
5. Numbers, times, and counters under speed
ๅๆฅ (ใใฃใ) vs ๅ ซๆฅ (ใใใ), ไธๆ (ใใกใ) vs ไธๆ (ใใกใ) โ easy on paper, brutal at speaking speed.
A Weekly Routine That Works
- Daily (15 min): shadowing one short dialogue.
- 3ร/week: one dictation โ write down exactly what you hear, then check.
- Before the exam: practice with the real ๅ้ก formats so the instructions never surprise you. Use the seconds before each question to read the choices and predict what you will hear.
Teacherโs Note
Listening is the one section you cannot cram the night before โ but it is also the one that improves most reliably if you train your ears a little every day. Ten honest minutes daily beats three panicked hours the week before the test.
Train your ears every day
Nihongo Pass includes native audio on vocabulary, grammar, and full mock-exam listening sections โ so your ears are ready on exam day.
Start Free Training โ