Sunday, January 17, 2010
Paper 2
This formed the introduction to the 'Source' based study which is what forms Paper 2.
You will begin to work out entire 'Source' based papers soon.So here come tips which you might find useful in tackling this paper.
Meaning of a 'Source' in History:
Evidence is used by historians to come to a balanced judgment on issues that concern them. The use of evidence forms the bedrock of research.
Many questions at exam level will require candidates to demonstrate their knowledge on how to handle evidence. The evidence - known as sources - presented to a candidate on an exam paper will usually be in the form of a photograph, cartoon etc. An examiner will expect the better answers to contain certain terminology which shows that a candidate does not necessarily take evidence for granted. Such terminology would include primary evidence, secondary evidence, reliable and bias.
All candidates need to know what each of these words mean.
Primary evidence is evidence that actually comes from the time being studied in the question. If you were studying the "Titanic", actual evidence that has been brought to the surface and is on display would be primary evidence. The memories of survivors would be primary evidence.
Secondary evidence is the opposite of primary. This is evidence that does not come from the time being studied. The recent film "Titanic" is secondary evidence. Historians frequently produce secondary evidence. The book "Cromwell" by Antonia Fraser has to be a piece of secondary evidence simply because Fraser was not alive at the time of Cromwell.
Historians will use a vast amount of sources - both primary and secondary - during their work. It is important for them to cross-reference all their used sources to get as balanced view as is possible.
If sources/evidence have been cross-referenced, it is safe to conclude within the realms of probability, that the finished product is reliable. If other evidence supports a specific piece of evidence, then that piece of evidence can be called reliable.
Bias is always a problem with regards to the study of evidence. Some sources are blatantly biased as would be clear in any study of Nazi Germany. Bias can be in favor of someone/something or not in favor. The sources from Nazi Germany which target the Jews were clearly not in favor of them and were biased against this group. Sources relating to Hitler were clearly in his favor and showed him in a good light - a privilege not extended to the Jews. Such evidence has to be treated with care and a knowledge of where it came from, what date it was produced and any reasons for it being produced have to be known before concluding whether the source is biased or not.
Even evidence that is clearly biased is of value to an historian. He/she should ask such questions as why it was produced ? Would there be a motive for the production of clearly biased sources ? If so, what was happening in that society, which tolerated the production of such material ?
HOW TO TACKLE PAPER 2
Source Study Questions:
Remember
The first thing to do when confronted by a Sourcework question is to establish:
1.WHAT KIND OF QUESTION IS IT?
Remember
when answering:
= ALWAYS use a quote/ facts from the Sources.
= ALWAYS use your own knowledge/ FACTS - esp. when it says ‘use your own knowledge’
How do I do Sourcework?
This is a question which many students have.
What follows are suggestions only, and by far the best way to learn how to do these will be to write answers to actual questions.
REMEMBER – Do NOT ever use the word 'biased'. 'Biased' is a pejorative word, and it makes it sound as though the source is not reliable or useful - where, of course, 'biased' sources can be both. Use the word 'one-sided' instead. If you MUST use the word 'biased', at least spell it right: 'b-i-a-s-e-d'.
There are basically FIVE types of Sourcework question:
1.Extraction (ie what can we GET OUT of this source?)
eg ‘What can we learn from Source(s) A (B,C etc.)... about ?’
REMEMBER – The examiners will usually ask this about a specific issue addressed by the source, so IGNORE anything in the source which does not deal with what they are asking about.
REMEMBER – This is usually a smaller/easier question, so look at how many marks are up for grabs and don't spend too long on it.
1st Describe what the surface information says - if the question is worth 3 marks, simply list three relevant facts the source tells you.
2nd If the question is worth 5 marks, see what the source infers – is there a message ‘between the lines’/ is it trying to create ‘an impression’/ is there an underlying message/ does it tell you further things about the author/the times/the situation? Include at least two inferences. Can you 'put two things from the source together' to deduce something further?
2.Differences:
eg ‘How/Why is Source A’s interpretation different to Source B’s?’
1st If you have been asked simply HOW the content differs, look first for OBVIOUS surface differences of fact, but then study the words/ details to deduce differences in approach, emphasis or tone.
2nd If you have been asked WHY the sources are different, you will need to compare who wrote them, in what situation, and the motives/ intentions/purpose of the author - depends on the sources and the wording of the question. This is a question when it is usually vital to use your own knowledge
3rd Make sure you come to a CONCLUSION based on facts/inferences/interpretations in the sources.
3.Accuracy/Reliability:
eg ‘How accurate is Source A as a source of information...?’
REMEMBER – primary sources (from the time) are immediate and even eyewitness, but they may lack perspective/ objectivity/ may be one-sided. Secondary sources (written afterwards – eg textbooks) can be dispassionate and use a number of primary sources, but they may be guilty of misinterpreting facts (until the 1960s, history books were often written to carry a message – eg Marxist, Nazi)
REMEMBER – sometimes the question may ask you about the 'validity' of the source = accuracy!
1st Test the information/claims of the source against other sources and your own knowledge. Does it give the true facts and feelings from the time – use your own knowledge.
2nd VITAL:Look at the provenance to establish context, origin and purpose – the situation in which it was written, who wrote it, and whether it is one-sided/propaganda etc. Look at sufficiency – does it give the whole story – what has it missed? Relate what you are saying to the specific context of the source - try to talk not only about generalities such as 'it may be biased', but about the specific situation (e.g. would be biased because...')
3rd Make sure you come to aCONCLUSION based on facts.
4.Utility (utility = 'usefulness' to historians)
eg ‘How useful is Source A to…?’
REMEMBER – nothing is ever useless; even the most one-sided source full of lies reveals what that author thought. Talk most about the ways in which the source is useful.
REMEMBER – this is a question about Quantity and Quality - how much information is it telling you, and how trustworthy is the information it is telling you? A USEFUL source is a source that TELLS YOU A LOT and WHICH YOU CAN TRUST.
REMEMBER – NEVER use the word 'reliable' in a utility question; the examiner will assume you are muddling the concepts up and divide your mark by two. If the accuracy of the source is an issue, use the word 'trustworthy' instead, but make it clear that you are saying this as part of assessing the source's utility.
1st Look at what the source is telling you and compare it to what you need/would like to know – remember both surface and inferred information.
2nd Measure the sufficiency of the source – how much info/ are there gaps?
3rd Useful for what? Can you trust the author's statements? Look at accuracy, context, origin and purpose: a source which is inaccurate may be useful for revealing the author's opinions and prejudices, but it is not useful for telling us the facts. Is the author’s view objective/typical?
4 th Compare the source'sSTRENGTHS against its LIMITATIONS and come to a
5. REACHING CONCLUSIONS.
eg ‘Use all the Sources to debate . . . .’
1st Recount relevant surface/inferred information from the Sources.
2nd Realise that the sources support both sides of the argument., and that you can use the sources and your own knowledge to argue both for and against the proposition.
3rd Weigh the evidence to come down one way or the other, OR state case and prove it, discounting contrary evidence
4th VITAL:Refer to the content and utility (sufficiency/ accuracy and reliability) of the sources in debate.
Thursday, January 14, 2010
Collapse of International Peace
Headline from an English newspaper of 7 March 1936.
GERMAN TROOPS
ENTER RHINELAND
Hitler Denounces Locarno
OFFERS AN ALL-ROUND
PEACE PACT
And Proposes to Re-enter
the League of Nations
– on Conditions
(a) In what ways did Hitler break the Treaty of Versailles between 1933 and the end of 1938? [5]
(b) Why did Britain and France follow a policy of appeasement with Germany in the 1930s? [7]
(c) ‘Hitler was a gambler rather than a planner in foreign affairs.’ Do you agree? Explain your
answer. [8] (June 2002)
Q2. Study the extract and then answer the questions which follow.
If one dictator cannot be stopped from attacking Abyssinia, nothing can stop another dictator from attacking Lithuania, Memel and Austria. If the League of Nations fails to prevent war, security will end, not only for the small nations, but for France and Czechoslovakia as well.
A British MP speaking in Parliament, 1 August 1935.
(a) What was the Hoare-Laval Pact? [5]
(b) Why was the conquest of Abyssinia by Italy not prevented by the League of Nations? [7]
(c) To what extent can the outbreak of war in 1939 be blamed upon the failure of the League of
Nations? Explain your answer. (June 2003)
Q3. Study the extract, and then answer the questions which follow.
If one dictator cannot be stopped from attacking Abyssinia, nothing can stop another dictator from attacking Lithuania, Memel and Austria. If the League of Nations fails to prevent war, security will end, not only for the small nations, but for France and Czechoslovakia as well.
A British MP speaking in Parliament, 1 August 1935.
(a) What was the Hoare-Laval Pact? [5]
(b) Why was the conquest of Abyssinia by Italy not prevented by the League of Nations? [7]
(c) To what extent can the outbreak of war in 1939 be blamed upon the failure of the League of
Nations? Explain your answer. (June 2003)
Q4.I now have to inform the House that in the event of any action which clearly threatened Polish independence and which the Polish Government accordingly considered it vital to resist with their armed forces, His Majesty’s Government would feel themselves bound at once to lend the Polish Government all support in their power. They have given the Polish Government an assurance to this effect.
British Prime Minister Chamberlain speaking in the House of Commons, 31 March 1939.
(a) When Hitler came to power, what did he hope to achieve in foreign policy? [5]
(b) Why did Britain go to war over Poland in 1939? [7]
(c) How far was the Treaty of Versailles to blame for the outbreak of war in 1939? Explain your
answer. [8] (Nov 2003)
Q5.Study the extract, and then answer the questions which follow.
We secured peace for our country for one and a half years, as well as an opportunity of preparing our forces for defense if Nazi Germany risked attacking our country. This was a definite gain for Russia and a loss for Germany.
Stalin speaking on the radio in 1941.
(a) What was agreed at the Munich Conference of September 1938? [5]
(b) Why was the Nazi-Soviet Pact of August 1939 important? [7]
(c) How far was the Treaty of Versailles to blame for the outbreak of war in 1939? Explain your
answer. [8] (Nov ’06)
Q6.Study the extract, and then answer the questions which follow.
At the time we had no army worth mentioning. If the French had taken any action we
could have been easily defeated; our resistance would have been over in a few days.
And the Air Force we had then was ridiculous and we did not even have enough
bombs for them.
Hitler looking back on his gamble over the remilitarization of the Rhineland, some years after the event.
(a) Describe the remilitarization of the Rhineland in 1936. [5]
(b) Why did Hitler want to unite Germany and Austria? [7]
(c) How far was the policy of appeasement followed by Britain and France responsible for the
outbreak of war in 1939? Explain your answer. [8] (Nov ’08)
Sample answers from the Half Yearly Q-Paper
Or, (c) How far could the Treaty be justified at the time? Explain your answer.
Level 1 Unsupported assertions [1]
e.g. ‘At the time it was the best that could be achieved.’
Level 2 Identifies justification [2–3]
e.g. ‘The Treaty of Versailles could have been harsher.’
‘The T of V failed to encompass the Fourteen Points.’
‘The T of V was acceptable to people in Britain and France.’
‘They blamed the wrong people.’
‘Germany had to be punished.’
Level 3 Explains agreement OR disagreement [3–5]
Level 4 Explains agreement AND disagreement [5–7]
e.g. ‘Many think a reasonable job was done as the problems faced were very complex with
strong demands for the Treaty to be even harsher against Germany as Germany had forced
a much harder peace on Russia under the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk.’
‘In the Armistice, the Germans agreed to reductions in their armed forces, losses of territory
and the principal of reparations. They should not have been surprised when these were
included in the peace treaty.’
‘Many at the time though it was about right. A more generous treaty would not have been
acceptable to the people of Britain and France who wanted compensation for loss of lives
and damage.’
‘The treaties left Germany very bitter and determined to get revenge. Germany could not
defend themselves and were open to political unrest.’
‘The Treaty punished the ordinary German people rather than those responsible. Would it
have been better to keep Germany relatively happy with the rise of Communism in Russia?’
‘It was wrong to put the sole blame on Germany as other countries had followed aggressive
imperialism including Britain and France.’
Level 5 Explains with evaluation of ‘how far’ [7–8]
Q2. (a) Describe the work of the Agencies of the League of Nations. [5]
Level 1 General answer [1–2]
e.g. ‘Identifies Agencies, e.g. the International Labour Organisation (ILO), the Mandates
Commission, the Minorities Commission, the Refugees Committee, the Slavery Commission,
the Health Committee.’
Level 2 Describes the work [2–5]
e.g. ‘The Mandates Commission made sure that Britain and France acted in the interests of
the people of that territory, not their own interests.’
‘The Refugees Committee helped to return refugees to their original homes after the end of
the war.’
‘The Slavery Commission worked to abolish slavery around the world.’
‘The Health Committee attempted to deal with the problem of dangerous diseases and to
educate people about health and sanitation.’
‘The ILO met once a year. Its aim was to improve working conditions throughout the world
trying to get member countries to adopt its suggestions.’
Q3.(c) How far did the structural weaknesses of the League of Nations prevent it from being
successful in the 1920s? Explain your answer. [8]
(Or, why was the structure of the League a weakness?)
Level 1 General Answer [1]
e.g. ‘It was too idealistic.’
Level 2 Identifies why [2–4]
e.g. ‘Not all nations were members.’
‘It had to rely on collective security.’
‘It was dominated by Britain and France.’
‘It was too slow to take action.’
‘Decisions had to be unanimous.’
Level 3 Explains why [4–7]
e.g. ‘Not all nations were members of the League. The USA never joined and this deprived
the League of the support of the most powerful nation in the world.’
‘The defeated nations, like Germany, were not members at first. Other nations, such as
Japan, left when they got into disputes with the League.’
‘The League had no armed forces of its own. It relied on collective security. Too often this
meant nations looking to the League to take action when they weren’t willing to act
themselves.’
‘The League was dominated by Britain and France but they never agreed on how powerful it
should be or how it should operate.’
‘The League was too slow to take action. All decisions, in the Assembly and Council, had to
be taken unanimously.’
‘The League was too idealistic. It was unrealistic to expect nations to obey the League
without giving it the power to enforce its will.’
‘All member states had equal voting rights. All decisions in Assembly and Council had to be
unanimous. This was fine when members agreed with each other, but not when they
disagreed.’
Q4.a) In what ways did the Treaty of Versailles weaken Germany’s armed forces? [5]
Level 1 General answer 1–2
e.g. ‘Germany’s armed forces were greatly reduced.’
‘It reduced the army/navy.’
Level 2 Describes terms 2–5
e.g. ‘The army was limited to 100,000 men. (1) There was to be no conscription. (1)
‘Germany was not allowed tanks, submarines or military aircraft.’ (One mark for 1; two
marks for all three)
‘The navy could only have six battleships (1) and was limited to 15,000 men.’ (1)
(No credit for Rhineland.)
Q5. Why did Clemenceau demand that a harsh peace be imposed on Germany? [7]
Level 1 General answer 1
e.g. ‘To weaken Germany.’
Level 2 Identifies why 2–4
e.g. ‘To pay for all the damage Germany had caused.’
‘To prevent future German attacks on France.’
‘To gain revenge (for all the French suffering).’
‘France lost many soldiers.’
Level 3 Explains why 4–7
e.g. ‘France had suffered enormous damage to its land, industry and people. Clemenceau
was under intense pressure from his people to make Germany pay for the suffering they had
endured both in 1870 and the Great War.’
‘Ever since 1870 France had felt threatened by its increasingly powerful neighbour,
Germany. Clemenceau saw the treaty as an opportunity to cripple Germany by breaking it
up into small, weak states so it could not attack France again.’
‘France had borrowed huge sums of money to fight the war and was faced with enormous
debt. Clemenceau wanted Germany to pay this debt.’
Sunday, November 22, 2009
Q1.Study the picture, and then answer the questions which follow.
The Assembly of the League of Nations in session, Geneva 1923.
(a) Describe the work of the Agencies of the League of Nations. [5]
(b) Why was the structure of the League a weakness? [7]
(c) How successful was the League of Nations in dealing with disputes in the 1920s and 1930s?
Explain your answer. [8] (June’08)
Q2. Study the cartoon, and then answer the questions which follow.
cartoon entitled ‘The Doormat’, published in a British newspaper in 1932.
(a) How did the League of Nations hope to prevent future wars between nations? [5]
(b) Why did the League fail to stop Italian aggression against Corfu in 1923? [7]
(c) ‘The League was a failure’. How far do you agree with this statement? Explain your answer.[8]
Q3. Study the extract and then answer the questions which follow.
The French want to suck Germany and everybody else dry and to establish French military and political control of the League of Nations. The French see the League of Nations as an organisation for the restoration of France to a supreme position in Europe.
Views of a British official at the peace negotiations in 1919.
(a) Which terms of the peace settlement of 1919 directly affected France? [5]
(b) Why did some countries view with suspicion the setting up of the League of Nations? [7]
(c) How far did the structural weaknesses of the League of Nations prevent it from being
successful in the 1920s? Explain your answer. [8] (June 2003)
Q4. Study the extract, and then answer the questions which follow.
The League may be a difficult scheme to work, but the significant thing is that the Powers have promised to make it work. Mankind has, in the short space of ten years, jumped from the old order to the new. We are witnessing one of the great miracles of history.
From a speech made in 1930.
(a) Describe two successes the League of Nations had in the 1920s in solving disputes. [5]
(b) Why was the League of Nations quite successful in the first ten years of its existence? [7]
(c) ‘The good work of the League was destroyed by the Depression of the 1930s.’ Do you agree? Explain your answer.[8] (Nov 2002)
Q5. Study the extract, and then answer the questions which follow.
Article 16: Should any member of the League resort to war, it shall be regarded as having committed an act of war against all other members of the League, and this will end immediately all trade and financial relations with that member.
From the Covenant of the League of Nations.
(a) How did the League of Nations hope to prevent future wars between nations? [5]
(b) Why did the League of Nations fail to restrict the aggression of Japan in the 1930s? [7]
(c) How far was the League of Nations a failure? Explain your answer. [8] (Nov2003)
Q6.Study the extract and then answer the questions which follow.The French want to suck Germany and everybody else dry and to establish French military and political control of the League of Nations. The French see the League of Nations as an organisation for the restoration of France to a supreme position in Europe.Views of a British official at the peace negotiations in 1919.
(a) Which terms of the peace settlement of 1919 directly affected France? [5]
(b) Why did some countries view with suspicion the setting up of the League of Nations? [7]
(c) How far did the structural weaknesses of the League of Nations prevent it from beingsuccessful in the 1920s? Explain your answer. [8]
Q7.Study the extract, and then answer the questions which follow.Article 16: Should any member of the League resort to war, it shall be regarded as having committed an act of war against all other members of the League, and this will end immediately all trade and financial relations with that member.From the Covenant of the League of Nations.
(a) How did the League of Nations hope to prevent future wars between nations? [5]
(b) Why did the League of Nations fail to restrict the aggression of Japan in the 1930s? [7]
(c) How far was the League of Nations a failure? Explain your answer. [8]
Q8.Study the extract, and then answer the questions which follow.
If the League had extended economic sanctions on oil, I would have had to withdraw from Abyssinia within a week.Mussolini speaking after his successful conquest of Abyssinia.
(a) Describe the successes of the League of Nations in the 1920s. [5]
(b) Why did the League fail to deal with Japanese aggression against Manchuria? [7]
(c) ‘It was the Abyssinian crisis that destroyed the League of Nations as an effectivepeacekeeping body.’ How far do you agree with this statement? Explain your answer. [8]
Q9. (a) Describe the humanitarian work of the League of Nations in the 1920s. [5]
(b) Why was the League able to achieve some successes in the 1920s in dealing with international disputes? [7]
(c) How far can the World Depression be blamed for the failure of the League? Explain your answer. [8]
Sunday, September 6, 2009
The 1919-23 peace talks
The leader of the German delegation at Versailles, speaking in 1919.
(a)What military restrictions did the Treaty of Versailles impose on Germany? [5]
(b) Why did the ‘Big Three’ disagree over how to treat Germany? [7]
(c) How far could the Treaty be justified at the time? Explain your answer. [8]
Q2. Study the extract, and then answer the questions which follow.In my opinion, it is not possible to lay the entire responsibility for the war on anysingle nation. By aiming at the destruction of the economic life of Germany this treaty threatens the health and prosperity of the Allies themselves. By making impossible demands it leaves Europe more unsettled than it found it.
John Maynard Keynes writing in 1920.Keynes was a British official in Paris at the Peace Conference but left early, disgusted at the treatment of Germany.
(a) What did Clemenceau want to achieve from the peace settlement of 1919–20? [5]
(b) Why did the terms of the Treaty of Versailles cause so much bitterness in Germany?[7]
(c) ‘The peacemakers of 1919–23 coped successfully with the problems they faced.’ How far do you agree with this statement on the treaties made with the defeated powers? Explain your answer. [8]
Q3. Study the extract, and then answer the questions which follow.The Allied governments affirm, and Germany accepts, the responsibility of Germany and her allies for causing all the loss and damage to which the Allied governments and their peoples have been subjected as a result of the war.
The War Guilt Clause.
(a) In what ways did the Treaty of Versailles weaken Germany’s armed forces? [5]
(b) Why did Clemenceau demand that a harsh peace be imposed on Germany? [7]
(c) ‘The Treaty of Versailles was unfair on Germany.’ How far do you agree with this statement? Explain your answer. [8]
Q4. Study the extract, and then answer the questions which follow.The ‘Big Three’ had very different ideas about the peace settlement. The traditional interpretation of their relationship is that Wilson was the idealist whose plans were undermined by the others, that Clemenceau was determined to gain French revenge whilst Lloyd George acted as a balance between the other two.
From a British school history textbook.
(a) What military restrictions were imposed on Germany by the Treaty of Versailles? [5]
(b) Why did the aims of the ‘Big Three’ at Versailles differ? [7]
(c) How successful was the League of Nations in the 1920s? Explain your answer. [8]
Q5.Study the extract, and then answer the questions which follow.We want a peace which will be just. We want a stern peace because the occasion demands it, but the severity must not be for vengeance, but for justice. Above all we want to protect the future against a repetition of the horrors of this war.
Lloyd George speaking about the Paris Peace Conference.
(a) Describe what Clemenceau and Lloyd George each wanted to achieve in the peace settlementof 1919–20. [5]
(b) Why did the Treaty of Versailles cause problems for Germany in the years up to 1923? [7]
(c) Was the Treaty of Versailles fair? Explain your answer. [8]
Sunday, August 23, 2009
Paper 1
Core content: Option B
The 20th century: International Relations since 1919
The Core Content in Option B focuses on seven Key Questions:
1 Were the peace treaties of 1919–23 fair?
2 To what extent was the League of Nations a success?
3 Why had international peace collapsed by 1939?
4 Who was to blame for the Cold War?
5 How effectively did the USA contain the spread of Communism?
6 How secure was the USSR’s control over Eastern Europe, 1948–c.1989?
7 How effective has the United Nations Organisation been?
1 Were the peace treaties of 1919–23 fair?
Focus Points
• What were the motives and aims of the Big Three at Versailles?
• Why did all the victors not get everything they wanted?
• What was the impact of the peace treaty on Germany up to 1923?
• Could the treaties be justified at the time?
Specified Content
• The peace treaties of 1919–23:
o the roles of individuals such as Wilson, Clemenceau and Lloyd George in the peacemaking
process
o the impact of the treaties on the defeated countries
o contemporary opinions about the treaties.
2 To what extent was the League of Nations a success?
Focus Points
• How successful was the League in the 1920s?
• How far did weaknesses in the League’s organisation make failure inevitable?
• How far did the Depression make the work of the League more difficult?
• How successful was the League in the 1930s?
Specified Content
• The League of Nations:
o strengths and weaknesses in its structure and organisation
o successes and failures in peacekeeping during the 1920s
o the impact of the World Depression on the work of the League after 1929
o the failures of the League in the 1930s, including Manchuria and Abyssinia.
3 Why had international peace collapsed by 1939?
Focus Points
• What were the long-term consequences of the peace treaties of 1919–23?
• What were the consequences of the failures of the League in the 1930s?
• How far was Hitler’s foreign policy to blame for the outbreak of war in 1939?
• Was the policy of appeasement justified?
• How important was the Nazi-Soviet Pact?
• Why did Britain and France declare war on Germany in September 1939?
Specified Content
• The collapse of international order in the 1930s
• The increasing militarism of Germany, Italy and Japan
• Hitler’s foreign policy to 1939:
o the Saar
o remilitarisation of the Rhineland
o involvement in the Spanish Civil War
o Anschluss with Austria
o appeasement
o crises over Czechoslovakia and Poland
o the outbreak of war.
4 Who was to blame for the Cold War?
Focus Points
• Why did the USA-USSR alliance begin to break down in 1945?
• How had the USSR gained control of Eastern Europe by 1948?
• How did the USA react to Soviet expansionism?
• What were the consequences of the Berlin Blockade?
• Who was the more to blame for starting the Cold War: the USA or the USSR?
Specified Content
• The origins of the Cold War:
o the 1945 summit conferences and the breakdown of the USA-USSR alliance in 1945–6
o Soviet expansion into Eastern Europe to 1948, and American reactions to it
o the occupation of Germany and the Berlin Blockade.
5 How effectively did the USA contain the spread of Communism?
Focus Points
This Key Question will be explored through case studies of the following:
• America and events in Cuba, 1959–62
• American involvement in Vietnam.
Specified Content
• events of the Cold War:
o case studies of:
o American reactions to the Cuban revolution, including the missile crisis and its aftermath
o American involvement in the Vietnam War.
6 How secure was the USSR’s control over Eastern Europe,
1948–c.1989?
Focus Points
• Why was there opposition to Soviet control in Hungary in 1956 and Czechoslovakia in 1968, and how
did the USSR react to this opposition?
• How similar were events in Hungary in 1956 and in Czechoslovakia in 1968?
• Why was the Berlin Wall built in 1961?
• What was the significance of ‘Solidarity’ in Poland for the decline of Soviet influence in Eastern
Europe?
• How far was Gorbachev personally responsible for the collapse of Soviet control over Eastern
Europe?
Specified Content
• Soviet power in Eastern Europe:
o resistance to Soviet power in Hungary (1956) and Czechoslovakia (1968)
o the Berlin Wall
o ‘Solidarity’ in Poland
o Gorbachev and the collapse of the Soviet Empire.
7 How effective has the United Nations Organisation been?
Focus Points
• What are the functions of the UNO?
• How far has the organisation of the UNO hindered its effectiveness?
• Case studies of the UNO in action: the Korean War and the Congo.
Specified Content
• The aims of the UNO, the organisation of the UNO, its agencies and their work
• The implications of the growth of membership: admission of developing nations and China
• Case studies of the work of the UNO in Korea (1950–3) and in the Congo (1960–3).
Syllabus code 0470
Candidates must take Paper 1 and Paper 2 and either Paper 3 (Coursework) or Paper 4 (Alternative to Coursework).
At Indus International School,Bangalore Paper 4 (Alternative to Coursework) is offered.
Paper 1: Duration:2 hours Total marks:60
Section A
Candidates answer two questions on the Core
Content (selected from 20th century Core topics .)
Section B
Candidates answer one question on a Depth
Study (selected from questions on all eight Depth Studies)
At Indus International School,Bangalore
Germany, 1918–45 is the topic offered for Depth Studies
40% of total marks come from this paper
Paper 2: Duration:2 hours Total marks:50
Candidates answer a series of questions on one Prescribed Topic.
The Prescribed Topics include one 19th century topic and one 20th century topic, taken from the Core Content .
For the examination in 2011, 20th century core topics will be:
20th century core: The Cold War, 1945–9 (May/June examination)
or The Treaty of Versailles (November examination)
20th century core: The Cold War, 1945–9,is the topic for Indus International School students for the (May/June examination) .
33% of total marks come from this paper
Paper 4 Duration:1 hour Total marks:40
Alternative to Coursework
Candidates answer one question on a Depth Study (from a choice of eight Depth Studies –
one question will be set on each Depth
Study).
The questions will be source-based and structured into several parts.
27% of total marks come from this paper