
If you cancel your booking after paying the full course fee, the following refunds are available: If you have any specific accessibility or support needs that you would like to discuss, please do not hesitate to contact me. I am trying to improve the accessibility of my teaching, but am very aware there will be things I have missed.
Always give the option for support needs/accessibility info to be shared at signup. Share my pronouns and encourage students to share theirs too (if comfortable doing so - this is never mandatory). Record lessons when someone is absent so they can watch them back in their own time. 5mins) around halfway through each class that is over 60mins Where possible, use fonts (in English and Japanese) recommended to support dyslexic learners. Use pale coloured backgrounds on slides, handouts etc to improve readability. Allow students to have their cameras off if need be. Encourage participation either verbally or through other forms, e.g. Enable automated (English) captions on Zoom. To improve online accessibility, I do the following: Only selected (few) cbse schools have japanese in their curriculuum.As this is an online course, I hope that in general it is more accessible than a course held in person. Start studying.(pause)… Japanese!” Actually the japanese language was not the part of our school curriculum. Once a friend joked that “our exams are coming. My friends mock at me when i say that i like japanese (songs, movies) etc. (friendly/unfriendly how they think i saw few japanese movies on utv world movies but i found some characters behaviour rude and some weird etc) and what is the scope of a person in india if he wants to be a japanese translator.(like translating books, manga, anime, films, etc).
But i dont know how the people of japan are. I liked japan because of their anime/manga, but gradually liked the language. See, normally we people in india rush to usa and uk for “abroad studies” and jobs. What is the scope of japanese studies for an indian learner? Is it good for an indian to work or study in japan. Krishna, prakash, rishikesh, raghavan, nikhil: Good to hear a few Indian names! Since you guys also love japanese, i wanted to ask a few things.