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【必备】日本2022留学优秀申请书

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日本科研、航天、制造业、教育水平均居世界前列。此外,以动漫、游戏产业为首的文化产业和发达的旅游业也是其重要象征。更多日本2022留学优秀申请书请点击“日本留学”查看。

日本2022留学优秀申请书

Dear _,

In China as in the _, one can easily give up the career of a language teacher to become a lawyer or a businessman. I, however, gave up a promising legal and business career to become a language teacher, but I have never regretted it. In fact, the more I teach, the more committed I am to teaching. But not just teaching. Having battled with China’s traditional mode of teaching for several years, I now would like to help improve teaching in China by introducing new and more effective instructional technology and media into the country. For that, I would like to pursue an advanced degree in education in your country.

Now an English teacher at the training center of the China National Container Corporation, I graduated in 1995 from the Capital University of Economics and Business in Beijing, where I majored in business law. At this highly respected higher-learning institution, I received broad training that was both rigorous and vigorous. After four years of undergraduate studies, the strong logic inherent in law translated into strong logic in my thinking. With the knowledge and skills I attained in the law program, I boast the kind of intellectual maturity that would help me whatever I do. But law was never my first choice for a profession.

Starting from my high school days, I always dreamed of becoming a teacher. In the second year of high school, we once had to write an essay on the topic “what do you want to do when you grow up”. I proudly wrote, “I want to be a teacher!” But my parents shattered my dream by insisting that I pursue another profession. My father, an engineer with a Ph. D. degree, and my mother, a university teacher of English, had their reasons. Chinese teachers, particularly those teaching at the primary and secondary levels, are poorly paid and begrudgingly respected. Being young and inexperienced in the world, I acceded to their wishes when I was choosing my major for the university.

But my passion for teaching was not to be stifled forever. Giver any opportunity, it would burst out. Upon graduation with an LL. B. Degree, I first took up the position of a supervisor with the China National Container Corporation in charge of its Overseas Sales Department. As the job entailed frequent translation and interpretation between Chinese and English, I persisted in improving my English proficiency by attending various training courses and learning it on my own. My command of the foreign tongue became so good that, after about one year, I began to teach it to my colleagues on a full-time basis at the company’s training center. After a huge detour, my career finally got back on track.

What makes teaching so enjoyable to me is that it is a learning experience. I enjoy it the most when my students ask difficult questions, particularly questions that I have to think long and hard to answer. I also enjoy posing questions to students, but my questions are never intended to intimidate the students or even test their knowledge but rather designed to stimulate their minds. In the constant exchange of questions and answers, students and teachers improve themselves alike to the credit of the old Chinese saying: To teach is to learn. In my three years of teaching, I really have learned a great deal.

One of the things I have learned is the ability to not only deal with but also strike an accord with people of different backgrounds. My students at the training center are all adults accomplished in a variety of roles and professions. In most cases, they are older than I am. While I stand as their equals, I have served as their mentors and role models the same way as most teachers do their students. By so doing, I have won their trust and confidence in what I teach, which has helped to make my teaching powerful and effective.

To take full advantage of my teaching skills, I started in October 1996 to teach English and other subjects at the primary school I attended when I was a child. As the children I teach are at the age when I studied here, I am particularly sensitive to their needs and appreciative of their potential. Together with other teachers, I designed various training programs in calligraphy, art, writing, mental calculation, and English, programs that combine learning with entertainment. The kids n my class are now learning more and faster thanks to the fun they find everyday in my programs.

Entertainment is, however, by no means just a ploy I use to sweeten the bitter pill of learning for the children, but rather has its own intrinsic value. While kids can hardly learn well without being able to have fun, the lack of fun hurts more than the kids’ ability to learn. It can impair the kids’ emotional and psychological health to an extent that no amount of knowledge and skills drab teaching force-feeds into them can make up. Entertainment is therefore part and parcel of what we teachers have to provide to children if we are to help them grow up into productive members of the society. The way I see entertainment, it should be considered an end in education.

As China’s education is oriented overwhelmingly towards helping kids pass exams, entertainment is about the least on the mind of an average teacher or principal. In the rush to produce super kids as measured by the grades out of exams, the purpose of education is lost all too often. The curriculum is limited to subjects covered by mandatory exams. Students are seldom encouraged to come up with original ideas. Interaction between teachers and students is kept at a minimum in the classroom. The teachers compete to heap homework on the students, as do the parents. While everybody is tired to death, few kids get armed with the ability to take initiatives or solve real-world problems. It is high time that fresh approaches were brought in.

One of the ways to make a change to the Chinese classroom is to utilize new technologies and media of teaching. School authorities in China, as those elsewhere, increasingly realize the importance of computerization, and many of the better-off schools in China are already stacked with state-of-the-art computers. But reports say only a tiny fraction of those computers are adequately utilized. The situation with other educational technologies and media is no better. They are either absent from the school sitting or vastly under-used. Few Chinese teachers have acquired the know-how or the drive to make use of these modern facilities.

I therefore would like to pursue first a master’s degree and then a Ph. D. degree in instructional technology and media in the United States, where the use of modern educational facilities is undoubtedly the most advanced in the world. Judging by the information I have culled from your, website I think your institution is an American leader in the research and studies of this field. I am anxious to study under the seasoned guidance of your distinguished faculty. I hope that, after I complete my advanced training in your program, I can be a much more effective teacher in China, one that sets an example for all other Chinese teachers.

Yours sincerely,

xuexila

日本留学要出示的申请材料

1、成绩单

作为进行硬件审核的重点,大家的成绩单是一定要出示的材料,而且会直接影响大家第一轮的审核,并且要确保自己有比较不错的成绩单,才能够顺利的通过,当然不同阶段要求会有差异。

而且目标学校的排名不一样,也会直接影响大家的准备,不过相信出国肯定是奔着去的,所以大家的将自己的平时考试分数提的越高越好,后期的努力也是会有效果的。

2、公证书

大家获取的官方证明,尤其是学历的证明,只有经过了公证之后才会受到学校的认可,所以大家要首先确保自己能够通过结业的考核,拿到官方发放的学历认证,确认申请的资格。

然后大家需要接受的公证,需要带着本人身份的证明,前往公证处接受审核,这里面具体的材料,包括大家毕业的证明、学位的证明,如果还未毕业,可以先准备预毕业证明。

3、推荐信

作为他人对申请者的评价,重要性远超大家对这份材料的认知,从推荐人到关系,再到文书的具体内容,都会进行认真审核,地位越高对大家的申请越有帮助,而且还会帮助大家提升竞争力,当然内容需要保证真实。

4、语言证明

申请学校日语认证的证书是不能够少的,需要大家参加标准的考试,才能够拿到证书,可以先选择N2 的考试,通过后再冲刺N1的考试,或者可以选择JTSET的考试,都是受认可的。

而英语的准备也有必要,如果能够处事不错的IELTS或者TOEFL的成绩单,会让大家更有竞争力。

5、护照

别忘了自己出国的身份证明——护照,这份证件需要大家自己去警局的入管局进行申请,带上身份证就可以了,填写表格之后,由工作人员进行审核,很快就可以拿到完整证明。

日本留学院校申请要求

1、语言学校

在日本的学习,大部分的专业都是使用英语来进行授课的,所以语言基础不牢固或者没有通过日语等级考试的学生,就需要先进入到语言学校,接受专业的培训,提升能力达标后才可以入学。

招生面向的是高中学历以上的学生,需要出示合格的学历证明;以及日语学习的相关证明,需要通过至少四级的考试,并且出示150个小时以上的日语课时学习证明。

2、大学別科

如果想要去日本读书先接受过渡的学习,一般建议大家选择別科,这是和未来升学的学校有着密切关系的选择,一般都会有合作的关系,完成了学习之后,可以直接通过考试成绩提交升学的申请。

而需要满足的先是学历上的要求,GPA的分数要有2.5分以上,日语也要通过标准化的考核,至少也需要有三级左右的水平,这样才能够应对在学校中的学习的需求。

3、大学

本科阶段就读的是大学,这需要大家按照正常的流程提交申请,需要大家读完高中的课程,出示合格的毕业证书,以及平均成绩的分数在3.0以上的GPA,才能够比较顺利的通过考核。

日语的能力考试要至少通过N2,并且还要通过学校的入学考试,才可以顺利的进入到自己想要就读的专业和学校中,当然保证金和其他的文书材料,也需要按照专业的要求准备好。

4、大学院

硕士及以上的阶段的学习,是需要大家进入到大学院中就读的,目前的申请也正面向毕业生开放,所以大家一定要确认自己有申请的资格之后在提交,GPA的分数要有3.5分以上。

而日语的要求也基本上都是要在N1以上,这对大家来说会是比较高的要求,一定要提前进行认真的准备,确认你自己的符合要求,此外作为辅助项目的材料也需要提前备好。

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