Key Idea: Topic 3.3 isn't new history to learn — it's the toolkit for Paper 1. You'll get 2-3 unseen sources about a political or economic transition (like Meiji Japan or the collapse of the USSR) and three fixed questions test how well you can read them.
That means this page matters just as much as any content topic. If you master the three question types here, you can walk into Paper 1 and score well on ANY transition — even one you haven't specifically studied — because the skill transfers.
How this topic is tested
Paper 1 always has the same shape: a short set of sources (usually three, labelled A, B, C) about one inquiry question, followed by three static questions worth 24 marks total.
| Question | Marks | Sources used | What it actually asks |
|---|---|---|---|
| Q1 — Content | 6 | TWO named sources | What does each source say? Pick a detail, explain how it answers the inquiry question — twice per source |
| Q2 — Context | 6 | ONE named source | Who made it, when, why — turn that into a value AND a limitation |
| Q3 — Perspectives | 12 | ALL the sources | Where do sources agree/disagree, and why — use that to answer the inquiry question |
Examiners tick off distinct points. In Q1, that means four separate mini-points (two facts from each source, each explicitly linked to the question) — not one smooth essay-style paragraph that blends fact and explanation together.
Must-know skills from every sub-topic
- Q1 — Content [6] — for two named sources, pick a specific detail (a date, a policy, a named event) and explain exactly how it helps answer the inquiry question. Do this twice per source. Worked example: a 1868 Meiji notice ending the Tokugawa Shogunate and stripping samurai privileges shows the political break was fast and reform started immediately.
- Q2 — Context [6] — for one named source, use OPVL (Origin, Purpose, Value, Limitation): who made it and why, then what that makes it good for (value) and weak for (limitation), always tied to the same inquiry question. Worked example: Yeltsin's October 1993 televised address has value as first-hand insider knowledge of the crisis, but the limitation that his political survival depended on the crisis looking justified.
- Q3 — Perspectives [12] — using ALL the sources, find where they agree, where they disagree, and explain why (their different positions in society), then say what that tells you about the inquiry question. Worked example: a Satsuma samurai's 1877 memoir (loss and betrayal) versus a Meiji official's report (proof reforms worked) — same rebellion, opposite perspectives, both valid evidence of winners and losers in the transition.
A perspective is the angle someone views events from because of who they are — a peasant, a reformer, a foreign observer. It isn't a flaw to dismiss; it's evidence to use. Labelling a source 'biased' and stopping there earns almost nothing in Q3.
Worked exam question — Q2 context
Analyse the context of Source B (Yeltsin's October 1993 televised address) and how it might affect its value and limitation for a historian studying the Russian Federation's political transition.
🔒 Model answer plan
See the mark-by-mark plan — for / against / judgement, with marking guidance — in study mode.
Important: The most common way students lose marks across all three questions is stating a fact from a source and stopping there. 'The source says samurai lost their privileges' earns nothing on its own — you must add 'which shows...' and connect it to the inquiry question every single time.
How many marks is Q1 worth, and how many sources does it use? 6 marks, using TWO named sources — two linked content points from each.
What does OPVL stand for and which question uses it? Origin, Purpose, Value, Limitation — the method for Q2, which analyses the context of ONE named source.
How many sources does Q3 use, and what is it really testing? ALL the sources (usually three) — it tests perspectives: where they agree, disagree, and why, tied back to the inquiry question.
Is 'this source is biased' a strong Q2 or Q3 answer on its own? No — bias alone earns little. You must explain what the source IS useful for and what it is NOT useful for, linked to the specific question.
In the Satsuma Rebellion example, why do the samurai memoir and the Meiji official's report disagree? They describe the same 1877 event but from opposite social positions — one is losing power and sees betrayal, the other is defending the government and sees necessary progress.
What single technique turns a Q2 limitation into a top-band answer? Showing that the SAME fact about the source's origin produces BOTH its value and its limitation, rather than treating them as unrelated points.
Q1 = two sources, two points each, always linked to the question. Q2 = one source, OPVL, value and limitation from the same fact. Q3 = all sources, agree/disagree/why, then answer the question. Reference sources by letter throughout — 'unlike Source A, Source C shows...' is exactly the phrasing examiners reward.