Jawa
Member
Hey,
I didn't have an Extension History Half Yearly so the test format will be new to me,
Doing a bit of my History Extension study today I was just wondering whether I have the right set out and approaching my study effectively to get a good mark. Now I know the styles of questions are fairly broad, especially for the 'What is History?' component and to combat this I have been making detailed notes on the syllabus dot points for two historians for each era and getting a few quotes for them (E.G Ancient - Herodotus and Thucydides) and then making a concise table of other historians of that era to further enhance my knowledge (Ancient - Xenophon, Polybius, Sallust, Livy, Tacitus).
Is this sufficient?
Now I know the other side of the exam is the case study question. One question, first off I do have is that I can have this 'case study' to be anything I want? I am doing the 'Nature of Western Imperialism in the 19th Century' as the syllabus one, but did the debate surrounding the Atomic bomb use at Hiroshima and Nagasaki for my investigation and am studying the evaluation of Albert Speer in Modern, is it correct that I can also use these as 'case studies' because they fulfil the syllabus requirements?
Second of all, for this section, how should I be studying my respective case studies? I think I will be wrapping my head around the basis of the topics, key historians and debates that are relevant, is this plausible?
Cheers,
I didn't have an Extension History Half Yearly so the test format will be new to me,
Doing a bit of my History Extension study today I was just wondering whether I have the right set out and approaching my study effectively to get a good mark. Now I know the styles of questions are fairly broad, especially for the 'What is History?' component and to combat this I have been making detailed notes on the syllabus dot points for two historians for each era and getting a few quotes for them (E.G Ancient - Herodotus and Thucydides) and then making a concise table of other historians of that era to further enhance my knowledge (Ancient - Xenophon, Polybius, Sallust, Livy, Tacitus).
Is this sufficient?
Now I know the other side of the exam is the case study question. One question, first off I do have is that I can have this 'case study' to be anything I want? I am doing the 'Nature of Western Imperialism in the 19th Century' as the syllabus one, but did the debate surrounding the Atomic bomb use at Hiroshima and Nagasaki for my investigation and am studying the evaluation of Albert Speer in Modern, is it correct that I can also use these as 'case studies' because they fulfil the syllabus requirements?
Second of all, for this section, how should I be studying my respective case studies? I think I will be wrapping my head around the basis of the topics, key historians and debates that are relevant, is this plausible?
Cheers,