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Higher History

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Title: Higher History


1
Higher History
  • Examples of sources

2
Higher History Paper 2 exam paper
  • The Paper 2 exam paper lasts 1 hour 25 minutes
    and consists of five sources and four questions
    about four different issues. This is the same for
    each of the five subject contexts.
  • Of the five sources, at least two sources will be
    primary sources and at least two sources will be
    secondary sources.
  • Each individual source will only be used for one
    question.

3
Higher History Paper 2 exam paper
  • Each subject context poses four questions on four
    different issues. The issues can be found in the
    central boxed area of the SQA arrangements
    document.
  • There are three types of questions
  • Source evaluation 5 marks appears once
  • Source comparison 5 marks appears once
  • Contextualisation 10 marks appears twice

4
Higher History Paper 2 NABs
  • The unit assessment (NAB) differs from the
    external exam paper. It lasts 1 hour and is
    marked out of 20. There are still five sources
    but only three questions.
  • The three types of questions are
  • Source evaluation 5 marks appears once
  • Source comparison 5 marks appears once
  • Contextualisation 10 marks appears only once
    as the over-arching question is removed.

5
What types of sources can be used in teaching
Paper 2 of Higher History?
  • Learners will be asked to evaluate various
    different primary and secondary sources.
  • Most sources will be written sources.
  • Visual and audio sources can also be used for
    analysis.
  • Books, resource packs and electronic/online
    materials provide other examples of sources.
  • A wide variety of sources is available locally
    and in the national collections.

6
Primary and secondary sources
  • Learners will have to be clear on the difference
    between a primary source and a secondary source.
  • Learners should also be reminded not to fall into
    the trap of thinking that primary sources are
    always useful and reliable, and secondary sources
    are biased.

7
Using primary sources
  • Primary sources give us first-hand insights into
    the past. They can be crucial for historians to
    use to develop an understanding and an
    interpretation of a past event.
  • To enable learners to interpret primary sources
    they should use questions to help them examine
    the primary source thoroughly.

8
Exemplar primary source
  • Extract from The Treaty of Union, 1689-1740
  • Higher History Specimen Paper
  • Source E from a letter written by the Earl of
    Mar to the Earl of Leven, 1708.
  • The Queen called a Cabinet Council last night,
    where she was pleased to call the Dukes of
    Queensberry and Montrose, the Earl of Loudon,
    Seafield and myself. We gave an account there of
    what orders the Queen had sent to Scotland, since
    the news of the invasion. It is expected that the
    Council will seize the horses and arms of those
    they think disloyal, and will also be giving
    their advice and instructions for securing the
    money, in the Mint and Bank, in case of a hostile
    landing. It was told to us that since both Houses
    had advised the Queen to arrest such persons as
    she had cause to suspect, and are now discussing
    a Bill for the suspending of Habeas Corpus Acts,
    it was appropriate that suspected people in
    Scotland should be arrested.

9
Using secondary sources
  • Sometimes learners assume that secondary sources
    are the fount of all knowledge on a topic.
  • Some learners dismiss secondary sources as being
    so biased that they conclude that the secondary
    sources are of no value.
  • To enable learners to deduce the interpretations
    contained within the secondary sources they could
    use questions to help them examine the secondary
    source thoroughly.

10
Exemplar secondary source
  • Extract from Migration and Empire, 1830-1939
  • Higher History Specimen Paper
  • Source A from T M Devine, The Scottish Nation,
    1700-2000 (2006).
  • It is clear that many of the crafts were being
    undermined by urban competition in the second
    half of the nineteenth century. Already by the
    1850s, the technology of power looms was
    destroying the textile economy in numerous
    villages in Perth, Fife and Angus and promoting
    large-scale migration as a result. The
    development of a network of branch railway lines
    enabled cheap factory goods to penetrate far into
    the rural areas and so threatened the traditional
    markets for tailors, shoemakers and other
    tradesmen. The displacement of craftsmen and
    their families from the smaller country towns and
    villages became a familiar feature of the rural
    exodus by the end of the nineteenth century and
    before. While some trades vanished completely,
    others, such as the blacksmiths, continued to
    thrive as long as the horse economy survived.
    However, in large part, migration from the land
    before the 1940s has to be explained in terms of
    the changing attitudes of the farm labour force
    itself.

11
Examples of questions to use when evaluating
sources
  • One of the best ways to understand a source is to
    consider these basic questions
  • When was it written/drawn/said?
  • Why was it written/drawn/said?
  • Who wrote/drew/said it?
  • What information does the source contain?
  • To encourage thinking skills learners could also
    think of other questions they have about the
    source as well as what the source missed out.

12
Example of evaluating sources
  • Here is a link to a useful but basic example of
    how you use simple questions to gain a more solid
    understanding of the source. This is to practice
    source handling skills it is not a Higher History
    question.
  • www.ltscotland.org.uk/scottishhistory/investigatin
    g/fodocuments/resource.asp This exercise is
    based on the Declaration of Arbroath.

13
Examples of written sources
  • Documents
  • Government reports
  • Hansard minutes from Parliamentary discussions
    and speeches
  • Cabinet minutes
  • Diaries
  • Letters
  • Manuscripts
  • Newspaper reports
  • Secondary text
  • Journals
  • Autobiographies
  • Biographies

14
Examples of visual sources
  • Drawings
  • Photographs
  • Cartoons
  • Paintings
  • Maps
  • Posters
  • Artefacts
  • Film footage

15
Examples of audio sources
  • Speeches
  • Interviews
  • News reports
  • Poems
  • Songs
  • Documentaries
  • Radio broadcasts
  • http//www.britishpathe.com/
  • http//www.itnsource.com/
  • http//archive.timesonline.co.uk/tol/archive/
  • http//www.bl.uk/

16
The national collections
  • There are many varied resources available for the
    five contexts of the Scottish History (Higher)
    unit, in the national collections as well as
    locally available sources. Some archive materials
    from the national collections have been digitised
    and are available online and some are used in the
    NQ subject guides.
  • Sources are available from
  • National Archives of Scotland
  • National Library of Scotland
  • National Galleries of Scotland
  • Scottish Archive Network
  • National Museums Scotland (NMS)
  • Museums Galleries Scotland
  • SCRAN
  • Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical
    Monuments of Scotland (RCAHMS)
  • Historic Scotland
  • The National Trust for Scotland
  • Mitchell Library in Glasgow
  • Scottish Jewish Archive Centre
  • Archaeology Scotland
  • Scottish Natural Heritage
  • engage Scotland

17
Literacy across learning
  • Learners will need guidance and strategies to
    help them understand and analyse sources. Often,
    it is not the learners historical knowledge that
    prevents them from analysing sources but their
    command of English, particularly with sources
    from earlier time periods or sources that are
    written in a higher register. It is therefore
    important for practitioners to take time to teach
    the type of language found in the sources they
    are using.
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