Paper 1 First Question, part a The focus of this question is on:
A
One writtten source.
B
One visual source.
C
Comparing and contrasting sources.
D
Looking at the values and limitations of a
source.
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Slide 1: Quizvraag
HistorySecondary Education
In deze les zitten 22 slides, met interactieve quizzen en tekstslides.
Lesduur is: 60 min
Onderdelen in deze les
Paper 1 First Question, part a The focus of this question is on:
A
One writtten source.
B
One visual source.
C
Comparing and contrasting sources.
D
Looking at the values and limitations of a
source.
Slide 1 - Quizvraag
Paper 1 First question, part a In order to get full marks for this question, how many points do you have to raise?
A
6
B
4
C
2
D
3
Slide 2 - Quizvraag
Paper 1 First question, parts a and b How should these answers be formatted?
A
As bullet points.
B
As single sentences written down the page.
C
As one paragraph.
D
As two paragraphs.
Slide 3 - Quizvraag
Paper 1 First question, part a What are signposts you should be using in your response when you introduce a new point?
A
This source says that..., Secondly, ..., It also suggests that...
B
I think, I believe, I understand
C
First, second, third
D
Never, always, sometimes
Slide 4 - Quizvraag
Paper 1 First question, part b How many points do you have to raise in your answer?
A
6
B
4
C
3
D
2
Slide 5 - Quizvraag
Paper 1 First question, part b How many sentences should you write in your response?
A
At least 8.
B
2
C
At least 4.
D
10
Slide 6 - Quizvraag
Paper 1 Second Question How many paragraphs should your answer include?
Slide 7 - Open vraag
Paper 1 Question 2
What is the focus of this type of question?
Slide 8 - Open vraag
Paper 1 Second question Which 5 words must appear in your response?
Slide 9 - Open vraag
Paper 1 Third question How many paragraphs should you write?
A
3
B
1
C
2
D
4
Slide 10 - Quizvraag
Paper 1 Third question What is the point of the third question?
Slide 11 - Open vraag
Semester test 16.12.22 Which content will be covered in this test?
Slide 12 - Open vraag
Semester test What time does the test start?
Slide 13 - Open vraag
Semester test How many questions do you have to answer?
Slide 14 - Open vraag
Why did support for Nazism grow after WWI?
pages 119-120
The years of the Weimar Republic were characterised by political conflict. The NSDAP was just one of many parties active at the time.
1919: Rebellion launched by Rosa Luxembourg and Karl Liebknecht of the communist party the Spartacists.
Slide 15 - Tekstslide
1919-1920
The Spartacist rebellion was crushed by the army and Freikorps.
Who were the Freikorps? Who was the president at the time?
1920: some Freikorps members tried to overthrow the government. They were led by Wolfgang Kapp.
Did this putsch work?
Slide 16 - Tekstslide
1919-1922
A rise in right-wing extremism in Germany.
376 political assassinations.
Name one politician who was assassinated.
Slide 17 - Tekstslide
January 1923
The Ruhr is invaded by French and Belgian troops. This was done to make Germany pay reparations. The German government ordered that citizens of the Ruhr carry out ''passive resistance`` and strikes.
What was the point of this?
Slide 18 - Tekstslide
What was the mark (the German currency) worth in 1920? (page 120)
A
5 % of its 1914 value
B
10% of its 1914 value
C
6% of its 1914 value
D
20% of its 1914 value
Slide 19 - Quizvraag
Which social group in German society were most affected by hyperinfaltion?
Slide 20 - Open vraag
What was the impact of the Munich Putsch of 1923 on the success of Nazism? (pages 120- 122)
Complete the following tasks:
1. Read page 120 and highlight anything you find important. 2. page 121: Who was Gustav Stresemann? 3. What did Hitler do after he was released from jail? 4. Explain what Germany was like under Stresemann. 5. What happened in 1929? 6. What impact did this event and its aftermath have on German politics (pages 121-122).
Slide 21 - Tekstslide
Up to the end of page 122.
3. What did Hitler do after he was released from jail? 4. Explain what Germany was like under Stresemann. 5. What happened in 1929? 6. What impact did this event and its aftermath have on German politics (pages 121-122).