akujunkan: (Default)
akujunkan ([personal profile] akujunkan) wrote2007-01-07 12:57 pm
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Ack.

Nine more days until my grad school apps are due. Even though I have taken care of everything it is possible for me to do, I still feel like I'm forgetting something. Or that everything will get lost in the mail. Or that I'm the least brilliant person who's ever applied and I'm going to spend the rest of my life in W-town. So, ack.

And in a totally unrelated question, [livejournal.com profile] sara_tanaquil, is there anything like the JLPT for Latin? I think I would be able to study more efficiently if I had something toward which to work. I took the National Latin Exam in high school, but I don't think you can take it if you aren't formally studying somewhere.

That will be all.

P.S.

[identity profile] sara-tanaquil.livejournal.com 2007-01-07 04:44 am (UTC)(link)
A few interesting items that turned up in a Google search...

http://www.amazon.com/SAT-Subject-Test-Latin-CD-ROM/dp/0738602531 (the Latin SAT subject test)

http://www.wm.edu/classicalstudies/languageplacement.php (a detailed breakdown of how one college, William & Mary, uses scores on the AP and SAT II to place students in its courses)

That's about all I could find. Gambare!

Re: P.S.

[identity profile] akujunkan.livejournal.com 2007-01-08 04:01 am (UTC)(link)
Thanks for the links. Kind of a bummer that there aren't any JLPT-style Latin exams. (I was rather hoping the arcane subject matter was working in its favor.) But with those links I'll probably be able to put something together to study toward.

Incidentally, I don't know that it's necessarily other languages that lack JLPT-style proficiency tests as it is cultures. I know there's a Korean proficiency test administered by the Korean government, and Japan has two Japanese-Korean proficiency tests of its own, as well as (at least) one Chinese-J test. At the risk of over-generalization, I'd say that it's Western Culture that doesn't provide standardized tests for most languages (TOEFL/TESL excepted). Because man, Asia is all about the rote learning/standardized testing.