GCSE History AQA Revision Guide: perfect for the 2024 and 2025 exams (CGP AQA GCSE History)

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GCSE History AQA Revision Guide: perfect for the 2024 and 2025 exams (CGP AQA GCSE History)

GCSE History AQA Revision Guide: perfect for the 2024 and 2025 exams (CGP AQA GCSE History)

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Student Books cover the most popular topics for Paper 1 with a clear and precise match to the new AQA specification Choosing when to start revising can be a very difficult task. Everyone knows that cramming everything in the night before the exam is not an ideal situation (to say the least!), but perhaps you are also worried that if you start your revision too early, you will lose motivation. Whatever you would like to do, it is vital that you have an organised way of filing your mind maps. If you are unsure on how you should be making and using your mind maps, take a look at this helpful article on how to use mind maps effectively. 3. Associate Particular Colours with Specific Places, People or Periods (Colour Code) history from three eras: Medieval (500-1500), Early Modern (1450-1750) and Modern (1700-present day)

This free online revision course includes Mary Queen of Scots, the Revolt of the Northern Earls, the Spanish Armada, Sir Walter Raleigh, colonisation and much more. Edexcel iGCSE This free online revision course includes the Russian Revolution of 1917, Tsar Nicholas II, the New Economic Policy, Stalin and his rivals, the cult of Stalin, the gulags/kulaks and much more. Cambridge iGCSE If you don’t wish to read this entire article and want the short answer, my first tip is to get more comfortable with reading as GCSE History will make you read lots and lots! That being said, it is not only the use of flashcards for self-testing that is effective revision. The act of making the flashcards will help you greatly, especially in identifying the areas where you have gaps in your historical knowledge. Therefore, it is incredibly important that you make your own flashcards! If you are unsure on how to go about doing this, here’s a useful article on how to make effective flashcards . An example of a question and answer that you may want to put on a flashcard (for the Medicine Through Time topic) is:As I’ve said before, GCSE History is a vast subject to study. This means that, as much as you can, you want to try and break down the information you have to learn into small chunks.

WJEC GCSE History Germany in Transition, 1919-1939 and The USA: A Nation of Contrasts, 1910-29 Student eTextbook create their own structured accounts, selecting organising and communicating their knowledge and understanding in written narratives Direct access to our subject specialist for support and guidance when delivering this qualification. Use CGP Online Editions for your own personal use, including things like studying, classroom teaching, lesson planning and in-school training.i. Our liability to you for any losses shall not exceed the amount you originally paid for the service. Mind maps are a great way of summarising your knowledge. They allow you to make links between information, and this is extremely useful when you are trying to get as much detail into your GCSE History answers as possible. If you are a more visual learner, it can often be helpful to use colours as a method of doing this. They can not only help you create links between pieces of information, but they can also make going over your revision notes, mind maps, or flashcards much more bearable! Accessing a CGP Online Edition by using a code from a printed CGP book grants you access to the title for three years from the date of activation of the code.

Access a collection of interactive units that bring together a number of elements including general data, exam questions, their marking schemes and examiner comments, which will lead you through a review of exam questions.Codes are used to transfer access provisions to other users. School customers will be given Codes on printed vouchers so they can provide students with access to titles. This book is a brilliant guide to success in GCSE AQA History! It covers the most popular Depth Study, Period Study and Thematic Study options, drawn from a range of historical eras in Britain, Europe and the wider world. Each topic is clearly and thoroughly explained to help students develop their knowledge and understanding of history. In cases where you want to use past papers to practice exam technique, you may want to write your responses (under timed conditions) with the information in front of you, so that you are practicing one skill at a time. However, it is important that you stop doing this once you have mastered the basic structures for each question type. This free online revision course includes the Plains Indians, Ranching, Billy the Kid, the Battle of Little Big Horn, the Dawes Act of 1887 and much more. When colour coding your History notes, my advice would be – keep it as simple as possible. Decide how you would like to organise your revision resources, and think about what you are struggling to link together the most – whether that is historical individuals, time periods, events and their consequences or places.

This book is the most useful of the textbooks currently on offer for the AQA GCSE thematic studies. Each section has an enquiry question, objectives, practice questions, study tips, work, extensions and key words. Timelines, biographies and fascinating facts are added where appropriate, and there is not the dry, repetitive feel that can infect a thematic study at GCSE. That said, here is the short answer for how to revise for GCSE History: when revising for History you will be required to remember so many periods, places and people that your brain will want to explode, so my main, number one tip, is to take frequent, yet short breaks. Other than breaks, I would say consider the following revision tips: Don't get surprised by your exam deadline and the amount of history work you'll have to get through. Plan your history revision sessions in a simple but clear revision timetable. This will help you break down the large amount of history content into manageable chunks so that you plan your normal life more easily around these revision sessions. You can create you timetable just on a piece of paper or use use online tools such as the Revision TimeTable Maker from The Student Room. Alternative History GCSE Revision ResourcesColour coding can be incredibly useful if done right. However, it is important to remember that you can’t rely on it as your only revision technique. It should be an addition to your flashcards, notes or mind maps. 4. Get an Easy to Digest GCSE History Revision Guide There's also plenty of top advice on the skills needed for each section of the exam, as well as knowledge organisers and online quizzes to help students test their knowledge of different topics. We've even thrown in a free Online Edition of the whole book — don't say we never spoil you! Please refer to this Agreement before adding more titles to your CGP Online Editions account (Your Account). 1. Licence If you are wanting the short answer to the question of “What is the Pomodoro technique?”, here it is: The above may not be how you want to use the different types of revision, but the point to take away from this is that you shouldn’t only use one technique for every piece of information. If you haven’t been inspired by the revision techniques listed here to help you with GCSE History, take a look at this useful article on revision techniques for GCSE and A-Level , which should give you some more detail on general ways to revise.



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