The first type: after graduating from high school, those who have no Japanese foundation need to go to a language school to study the language, take the EJU exam for foreign students in Japan (those who have a language foundation can take it directly), and make a good application with the school and stay in the exam. After reviewing your information, the school will inform you to take the school entrance examination and finally wait for admission.
The second type: study Japanese in China and participate in the in-situ direct examination program of domestic Japanese universities. Exam 165438+ China District of Dijing University1October 26th-the enrollment is limited to 20 students after submitting the materials.
Some schools or majors still need to provide English scores, so students had better take TOEFL and TOEFL, which is very helpful for further studies.
The third type: you don't need Japanese scores through the G30 project, but you can submit high school scores and TOEFL IELTS scores.
If you are a graduate student, like the above answer, I think the answer is good. At this stage, it is better to study directly as a monk. If you want to study as a trainee, you may waste time, the effect is not good, and you will be embarrassed if you fail the exam.
Some language institutions will tell you that they will write research plans for you, which is actually very bad. If the Japanese professor finds out, he will basically bid farewell to studying in Japan, so I suggest you make a good research plan and get on well with the professor. If you can do this, I suggest you sign up for a private school in a language school for counseling. DIY is not impossible. If you are strong, you can submit some papers yourself.