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Understanding history coursework assessment objectives.
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Last summer saw a varied and wide ranging series of topics covering several thousand years’ worth of history. We’ve seen some key insights come out as a result for all units .
Topic choice
Perhaps one of the most important things to remember, before any words have been written, is to be careful of the topic that you choose. Some topics have proven to be harder to resource than others. Be mindful of the demands of the assessment objectives, not only when marking, but when choosing the topic. Students have, perhaps unsurprisingly, shown their love of certain topics, but finding a decent number of credible or valid interpretations (AO3) have proven to be much harder and have hampered responses as a result.You can read more about choosing a topic in Mike Goddard’s blog .
Resourcing the topic
We recommend that each coursework piece should use at least 10-15 sources in total, covering both primary and secondary, an essay that uses only a solitary historian’s view is not going to score high marks in AO3. Equally, if a response only uses one or two primary sources, they will be unlikely to score highly in AO2. So if a topic is proven hard to resource, it might be worth thinking again!
Synopticity matters
The other really important thing to remember is that this is a synoptic unit. The essay skills you need to show in papers 1 and 2 are similar to the essay skills needed in coursework. You have to write relevantly; answer your own question; discuss different interpretations and come to a reasoned and convincing judgement. The source skills of analysis and evaluation of primary sources by using provenance and knowledge must also be applied in coursework – remember that there are 10 marks for evaluating primary sources.
You also need to use the skills that you have been using in Unit 3 when you have evaluated the two extracts from historians by using your own knowledge. The difference between coursework and these units is that you can choose which secondary and primary sources to include – so be sure that you choose evidence which you can evaluate! You can read more about units 1-3 in the guide to assessment .
The Assessment Objectives
Let us look at some key bullet points for each of the assessment objectives. The focus here will be on common themes aimed at supporting overall improvements.
- Ensure descriptive narrative isn’t overly credited.
- Ensure responses are focussed on the question. If an answer doesn’t remain focussed throughout, it can’t be a top level response.
- Avoid long, rambling paragraphs, keep to the point!
- Ensure marks for evaluation are for evaluation, and not for explanation – it doesn’t matter how excellently they’ve explained a source if they haven’t evaluated it.
- Evaluation at this level should reflect the skills learnt for unit 1 – evaluation of provenance and using own knowledge, but must be more than simple comments like: “This is a good source as the writer was living at the time”.
- Example of basic evaluation: “Hitler made the speech and he was the leader and would know”
- Better to say: “Hitler was making the speech at a time when war was imminent and emotions were high, but it may not reflect his true intentions, because the policy was still to force Jews to emigrate
- The key messages here were similar to AO2 but also include:
- Sometimes students simply cross reference historians and that would not be credited highly. For example, comments like “Kershaw agrees with Evans”.
- The only effective form of evaluation is always going to be that based on contextual evidence and ones that are sustained throughout the response.
The full asessment objectives can be accessed via the website .
As some key takeaways, we would urge your students to remember the following:
- Remember to choose the right topic – something that interests the student is great, but only if it is ‘doable’.
- Remember how to use AO2 and AO3 – simply saying “he was/wasn’t there at the time” or “Man agrees with Weatherford” (for any Mongol fans out there) is not enough.
- Remember to focus on the question not the topic!
Finally – scripts with commentaries from the summer series are now available on interchange
INSET material will also be available in due course.
Coming soon
We have a brand new interactive tool, giving you access to thousands of pre-approved coursework questions, bringing you a whole new way of submitting questions to us. Make sure you’ve signed up to updates to keep up to date with all the latest news and events.
Grant Robertson
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COMMENTS
within the 3000-4000 word recommended limit. Very long answers are burdensome to both learners and teachers who mark them and should be discouraged. Titles should be chosen which can be answered in sufficient depth in the recommended word limit. Marks will not be deducted for excessive length, but learners may well penalize themselves by offering
Students must take one unit from each of unit groups 1 and 2 to be awarded the OCR AS Level in History A. Content overview Students select one topic in British history and one topic in non-British history to study.
Independent Study Guide. Delivering Results, Step by Step. Dr Leif Jerram. Senior Lecturer in History University of Manchester. www.ocr.org.uk/history. This is a guide for students, containing suggestions for how you might want to approach unit Y100 ‘Topic based essay’ of A level History A (H505).
For the OCR coursework, what is the maximum I should write? I know the recommended max is 4000 but I'm on 4600 and don't know what I can cut out. My teacher said that it was fine as long as it is still evaluative which I think mine is so can I still get top marks writing 4600 words? See more.
Updated. There is no definitive answer to this – the mark scheme talks about an appropriate range, and this means appropriate to the question set. However, a useful guide is 10-15 in total, and for most topics there will probably be an even split between primary and secondary sources.
How strict are OCR with the world limit? I know AQA deduct 5 marks but not too sure about OCR. I’ve heard some people say that people submit 15K essays and get full marks whereas some get penalised for 5K.
I’m currently writing up my history coursework essay and I read that OCR recommends between 3000-4000 words. However I’ve been told by my teacher to include another 6 primary sources, which would include evaluating them as well, and therefore my word count is going to be well in excess of 4000 words. Will this be accepted by the exam board ...
within the 3000-4000 word recommended limit. Very long answers are burdensome to both learners and teachers who mark them and should be discouraged. Titles should be chosen which can be answered in sufficient depth in the recommended word limit. Marks will not be deducted for excessive length, but learners may well penalize themselves by offering
to clarify the rules around word counts for the coursework. Students are expected to write between 3000 to 4000 words for their coursework assignment, as stated on page 121 of the specification.
We recommend that each coursework piece should use at least 10-15 sources in total, covering both primary and secondary, an essay that uses only a solitary historian’s view is not going to score high marks in AO3.