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Topic 6.5History (2028+) HL24 flashcards

Concepts and Paper 2 exam skills

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Card 1 of 246.5.1
6.5.1
Question

What does the concept 'cause and consequence' ask about conflict?

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Card 1concept
Question

What does the concept 'cause and consequence' ask about conflict?

Answer

Why the conflict happened and what resulted from it — always multiple, interrelated causes, and outcomes that were never inevitable.

Card 2definition
Question

Define 'historical actors' vs 'conditions' in cause and consequence.

Answer

Actors are the people making decisions (leaders, soldiers, civilians); conditions are the circumstances they operate within (economic, political, social).

Card 3concept
Question

What does 'continuity and change' ask about conflict?

Answer

What a war transformed and what stayed the same — the two happen at the same time, not one after another.

Card 4example
Question

Give an example of continuity and change from the Vietnam War.

Answer

Change: Vietnam reunified under communist rule in 1975. Continuity: rural village life in much of the countryside recovered much as before.

Card 5concept
Question

What does the concept 'perspectives' ask about conflict?

Answer

How different groups — combatants, civilians, victors, and later historians — view the same conflict differently, and how valid each view is.

Card 6example
Question

What was the 'credibility gap' in the Vietnam War?

Answer

The mismatch between official U.S. government reports of progress and the on-the-ground accounts of journalists and soldiers.

Card 7concept
Question

What three things can make a conflict or experience 'significant'?

Answer

Power (did it shift who holds control), impact (how many were affected and how deeply), or what it reveals about deeper processes.

Card 8example
Question

Why is the Rwandan genocide (1994) considered historically significant?

Answer

Though small in territory, it reveals how colonial-era Hutu-Tutsi identity categories and international inaction enabled mass atrocity.

Card 9comparison
Question

Compare the causes of the First World War and the Mexican Revolution.

Answer

WWI: long-term alliance rivalry + arms race, triggered by an assassination. Mexican Revolution: long-term land inequality under Díaz, triggered by Madero's 1910 revolt.

Card 10process
Question

Why should you never call a conflict's outcome 'inevitable' in an IB History answer?

Answer

Because outcomes result from choices made by actors within specific conditions — they were probable, not certain, and could have gone differently.

Card 11process
Question

What must a Paper 2 §B(b) essay ('To what extent...') include to avoid being self-penalising?

Answer

At least two examples from at least two different IB regions, connected to a clear, substantiated judgement.

Card 12definition
Question

What is the command term and mark value of Paper 2 Section A?

Answer

Analyse, worth 6 marks — a concept mini-essay using one example from the thematic study.

6.5.212 cards

Card 13process
Question

What are the three Paper 2 question parts on a thematic study, and their marks?

Answer

Section A concept mini-essay [6]; Section B(a) explain one example [4]; Section B(b) 'To what extent' essay [15].

Card 14definition
Question

What is the mandatory cross-regional rule for Section B(b)?

Answer

You must use at least 2 examples from at least 2 different IB regions (Africa & the Middle East, the Americas, Asia & Oceania, Europe), or the answer is self-penalising.

Card 15concept
Question

What earns 5-6 marks (top band) on Section A?

Answer

The concept is clearly and accurately analysed, effectively supported by ONE relevant, specific example — not just described.

Card 16concept
Question

What earns only 3-4 marks on Section A?

Answer

The concept is partially analysed and supported by a relevant example, but the link between example and concept stays underdeveloped or vague.

Card 17definition
Question

What is the command term for Section A, and what does it require?

Answer

Analyse — break the concept (cause & consequence, or perspectives) down and show how the example demonstrates it, not just describe what happened.

Card 18process
Question

How many examples does Section B(a) need?

Answer

Just ONE, explained specifically and clearly — depth beats breadth for this 4-mark question.

Card 19example
Question

Give one Europe example and one Asia & Oceania example of civil war that could anchor a cross-regional Section B(b) essay on continuity and change.

Answer

Europe: the Russian Civil War (1917-1922). Asia & Oceania: the Chinese Civil War (1927-1949, with a pause 1937-1945). Both reshaped their societies through single-party rule.

Card 20concept
Question

Why is narrative without judgement penalised on Section B(b)?

Answer

Descriptive answers stay in the lower bands (4–6, or 7–9 with partial analysis); a consistent judgement reaches 10–12; only fully analytical work with a substantiated judgement throughout reaches the top band (13–15). Retelling events is not the same as answering 'to what extent'.

Card 21comparison
Question

How do you show 'perspectives' as a concept using two regional examples?

Answer

Compare how different groups experienced the same TYPE of conflict differently, e.g. Algerian civilians vs French settlers in the Algerian War (Africa & the Middle East) compared with Confederate vs Union civilians in the US Civil War (the Americas).

Card 22process
Question

What structure should a Section B(b) answer plan follow?

Answer

Thesis stating your judgement -> 2-3 themed paragraphs, each drawing on both regions and explicitly comparing them -> a final judgement that answers 'to what extent' directly.

Card 23example
Question

What is the single biggest self-penalising mistake on Section B(b)?

Answer

Writing about only one region's conflicts — even a brilliant single-region essay is capped below top band because the ≥2-region requirement is not met.

Card 24definition
Question

What does 'significance' mean as an exam-answer concept for conflict?

Answer

Judging which conflicts, causes, or experiences mattered most and explaining why — not just listing what happened.

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