Standard Tokyo dialect (hyojungo). All speakers are professional voice actors — clear enunciation without being robotic. Male/female speakers alternate. 3. Strengths (What Works Well) ✅ Authentic Exam Simulation The audio mirrors the JLPT’s one-time playback feel. In the practice sections, there are no pauses inserted artificially. You must listen, process, and answer immediately — just like test day. ✅ Background Noise & Distractors ALC includes subtle background sounds (station announcements, café chatter, phone static) that mimic real-life listening conditions. This trains you to filter noise — a major skill for higher JLPT levels. ✅ Progressive Difficulty Early tracks in each section use N5 vocabulary and grammar. Later tracks introduce N4 structures without warning. This forces you to adapt — unlike some resources that keep each unit strictly level-locked. ✅ Answer Explanations (in Japanese) After each listening question, the audio track includes a brief Japanese explanation of why the correct answer is right and why distractors are wrong. This is excellent shadowing practice. ✅ No English crutch The audio is 100% Japanese. No translation, no slow repetition. This is painful at first but highly effective for building real listening endurance. 4. Weaknesses & Limitations ❌ No Script in Audio Format The book includes transcripts in the back, but the audio itself does not provide a “listen and repeat” slower version. If you miss a phrase, you cannot rewind to a slowed version — you must look at the transcript manually. This is less learner-friendly than modern apps (e.g., Satori Reader, Pimsleur). ❌ Low Production Value on Older CDs If you buy a used copy with the original CD, the audio quality is noticeably compressed (low bitrate ~128kbps MP3). Newer downloads are fine (192kbps+). Avoid secondhand CDs. ❌ No Integrated App / Spaced Repetition Unlike JLPT Sensei or Bunpo , you cannot loop tracks easily on a phone without a separate MP3 player. The audio files are numbered but not tagged with episode metadata — organization is manual. ❌ Pronunciation Section is Weak The first few tracks on pitch accent are too brief (under 5 minutes total for N5). If you have never studied Japanese pitch, this will not teach you. It only tests minimal pairs you already know. ❌ Answer Choices Are Not Read Aloud In the real JLPT, answer choices are printed. In Goukaku Dekiru , they remain printed. That’s fine. However, some competitors (e.g., Shin Kanzen Master ) read choices aloud too, which helps auditory learners. This book does not. 5. Comparison with Other JLPT Audio Resources | Resource | Audio Speed | Explanations | Noise/Distractors | App Support | |----------|-------------|--------------|-------------------|--------------| | Goukaku Dekiru N4/N5 | Natural (test pace) | Japanese only | Yes (good) | No | | Shin Kanzen Master Listening | Slightly slower | Bilingual (JP/EN) | Minimal | No | | Nihongo So-Matome N4 | Slower, clearer | Japanese only | No | No | | JLPT Official Practice Book | Real exam pace | None | Yes | No | | Bunpro / Renshuu (apps) | Adjustable | None (just audio) | No | Yes |
Very realistic. Unlike many beginner resources (which speak unnaturally slowly), Goukaku Dekiru uses natural JLPT speed — about 75-80% of normal conversational speed. This is excellent training for the real exam. goukaku dekiru n4 n5 audio
1. Overview & Target Audience Goukaku Dekiru (published by ALC) is a well-known series designed specifically for JLPT drill-based learning. Unlike comprehensive textbooks (e.g., Genki or Minna no Nihongo ), this is a workbook . The N4/N5 volume is aimed at beginners who have already learned basic grammar and vocabulary and are now focusing on test-taking strategy . Standard Tokyo dialect (hyojungo)
| Track Type | JLPT Task Match | What You Hear | |------------|----------------|----------------| | | None (foundation) | Minimal pairs (e.g., hito/bito ), pitch accent basics, long vowels. | | 2. Task-Based Listening | 課題理解 | Short conversations about schedules, maps, store layouts. | | 3. Point Listening | ポイント理解 | Longer monologues (announcements, news, weather). | | 4. Utterance Expression | 発話表現 | What would you say? (e.g., offering tea, asking permission). | You must listen, process, and answer immediately —