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Top Tip for Memorising Statistics (and all the World War I Stats You'll Need!)

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jakesilove:
CHECK THE ATTACHMENT! (you may need to log in to see it)

Throughout your Modern History journey, there is one thing that is absolutely certain: you will have to memorise literally hundreds and hundreds of specific, accurate, relevant and detailed examples to back up any point you make. Modern history is nothing without statistics, and whilst I personally think it is silly that you have to memorise them as opposed to having an open book exam, that’s just the situation you are in!

Note that the following methods works perfectly with any other content-heavy subject!
The technique I used to memorise statistics was work sheets. Basically, I would write out my own worksheets with blank spaces, photocopy the worksheets a hundred times, and fill out the worksheet 5 times a day for weeks and weeks.

Amazingly, it works. It almost doubled the number of statistics I remember for my Modern History HSC.

I was going to release two resources, one about worksheets and one about World War I. Instead, I thought I’d just combine them into one! Check the attachment for the actual worksheets :)

The way I would use worksheets is as follows.

For each section (dotpoint perhaps?) I would write a worksheet with ONLY the absolutely crucial statistics that you are planning to remember. That means maybe 10-15 statistics per subtopic, max. Make a worksheet for each topic, and use it throughout the year to help you learn what you need to learn!

Below are the statistics I used for World War I, in Worksheet (and then answer) form. If you choose to just use mine, I can promise you that you DON’T NEED ANY MORE. That being said, if you have your own statistics please please just use yours (and make your own worksheets!). Also, remember that a lot of different sources use a lot of different statistics, which are often contradictory. Mine were mainly given to me by my teachers or found in books by prominent historians. You may have conflicting statistics; the fact is we are not always 100% sure!

Whilst I’ve only written the worksheets below for World War I, you can write your own for the entire curriculum!

Obviously this doesn’t help for an actual thesis, but it definitely does help memorising statistics.

I really hope this helps! Feel free to comment with any questions, additions, corrections, comments, criticisms etc. etc. etc.

Jake :)

CHECK THE ATTACHMENT!

[email protected]:
Hi Jake,
Just wondering if you were able to please post the worksheets you used for national study Germany and personality Albert Speer (if you studied him)?
If you could that would be great thanks so much!!

jakesilove:

--- Quote from: [email protected] on February 12, 2016, 11:22:45 pm ---Hi Jake,
Just wondering if you were able to please post the worksheets you used for national study Germany and personality Albert Speer (if you studied him)?
If you could that would be great thanks so much!!

--- End quote ---

Hey Laura!

Unfortunately I don't actually have worksheets for that section yet, however I definitely plan to develop them in the next few months. If anyone else would like to help develop them, by producing their own and sending them through, that would seriously help the community! I would also be happy to check over any such notes and make sure they are helpful/accurate :)

Jake

KarenCho:
This is awesome, thank you so much Jake! :)

Belkelly:
Hi Jake,

Thanks so much for this, its super super helpful!
I'm also going to study Germany as my national topic and Albert Speer, so I look forward to those worksheets :)
Unfortunately I haven't started yet, but when I do I'll try making some worksheets up on my own as practice and send them to you.
Btw, the worksheets on WW1, are they in order in which you studied them?? Or just in any old order?

Thanks again, I love this site!

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