Paper 2 always opens with Section A. You get one short question, worth 6 marks, and it always asks you to analyse one of the four concepts using one example from your thematic study.
The four concepts are cause and consequence, continuity and change, perspectives, and significance. The real exam only picks two of these per paper — but you cannot predict which two, so you prepare all four for popular movements.
What Section A is really testing: Not "what happened" — that's description. It's testing whether you can build a focused argument about ONE concept, using ONE well-chosen movement, in about 6-8 sentences.
- Cause and consequence — why did this movement arise, and what did it actually achieve?
- Continuity and change — what did it transform, and what stayed the same afterwards?
- Perspectives — how did activists, opponents, governments, and later historians see this movement differently?
- Significance — why does this movement matter more than a passing protest — what lasting difference did it make?
Notice the pattern: every concept needs the same kind of example — one movement you know well, with specific dates, names, and outcomes. A vague example ("a civil rights movement happened in America") cannot score in the top band, however confident the writing sounds.
The 5-6 mark formula: State the concept-focused claim in one sentence. Give 2-3 specific pieces of evidence about your example. Explicitly link each piece of evidence back to the concept word in the question (say "consequence" or "significance" out loud in your answer).
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Section B(a) is short — 4 marks — and it always says something like "Explain an example of [a type of popular movement] from your thematic study."
This is the easiest mark on the paper if you prepare it right, and the easiest mark to lose if you don't. The trick is depth over breadth: one specific, well-explained example beats three vague ones every time.
Depth beats breadth: Naming three movements in one sentence each earns fewer marks than naming ONE movement and explaining it properly: who was involved, what they did, when, and what resulted.
Name it precisely
State the exact movement, country/region, and rough dates — not just "a labour movement".
Say what happened
Give 2-3 concrete details: key actions, key people, or key events that defined it.
Say what it explains
Tie those details directly back to the question's focus — is it explaining a cause? A method? An impact?
One movement, three sentences, all pointing at the question.
Common pitfall: Writing a generic paragraph that could apply to almost any movement ("people protested and eventually got change") earns almost nothing. Specificity is the whole mark scheme here.
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This is the big one — 15 marks, and the essay that decides most of your Paper 2 grade. It always uses the phrase "To what extent..." and it always needs at least two examples from at least two different IB regions.
The four IB regions: Africa and the Middle East · the Americas · Asia and Oceania · Europe. Your two chosen movements must come from two DIFFERENT ones of these four.
"To what extent" is not a yes-or-no question. It wants a judgement on a scale — largely true, only partly true, mostly false — supported by evidence, not a fence-sitting "there are many views" non-answer.
Example 1 — the Americas: US civil rights movement (1954-1968)
- Cause: segregation laws and systemic racial inequality in the South
- Method: non-violent protest — boycotts, sit-ins, the 1963 March on Washington
- Consequence: Civil Rights Act (1964) and Voting Rights Act (1965)
- Limit: economic inequality between races persisted after the legal wins
Example 2 — Africa and the Middle East: anti-apartheid movement, South Africa (1948-1994)
- Cause: apartheid laws enforcing racial segregation from 1948
- Method: mixture of peaceful protest (ANC campaigns) and armed resistance, plus international sanctions
- Consequence: end of apartheid and the first democratic elections in 1994
- Limit: deep economic inequality between racial groups persisted after 1994
Notice how the comparison works: both movements achieved real political change (concept: cause and consequence), and both show the same continuity and change pattern — legal equality won, economic inequality left largely untouched. That shared pattern IS your comparison — say it explicitly, don't just describe the two examples side by side.
How to compare, not just describe: Use linking phrases like "similarly," "in contrast," or "unlike [Example 1], [Example 2]..." at least twice in the essay. Examiners are listening for the comparison, not just two separate paragraphs sitting next to each other.
Common pitfalls that cap your mark: One region only (self-penalizing, however detailed) · pure narrative with no judgement stated · examples too vague to be useful (no dates, no names) · comparison implied but never actually written out.