Cute-Duckie
Arbitrarily Active Member
- Joined
- Jul 26, 2023
- Messages
- 239
- Gender
- Female
- HSC
- 2025
Hey everyone!
So I initially wrote this information as a reply to a few questions on the Class of 2025 thread, but after spending over an hour on writing my response, and another half an hour editing my response so it made sense (for some insane reason - I think I just hyperfocused lol), I thought this infodump deserved its own post. Although be warned: it's just over 2500 words, so try not to get overwhelmed by the initial amount of information! These are all things I have learnt throughout the past year and just dumped here, so it's okay if it doesn't all stick or make sense initially.
A bit of context about me: I do Accelerated Ancient History at my school. My Year 11 Prelims mark was sitting at 79%, and I hated the feeling of getting that mark back, so I set a goal for myself to achieve a Band 6 in the Ancient History Course. Somehow, one year later, I've just got a 96% on my trials, an this post is basically a summary of the things I've learnt to improve my mark from a Band 4 to a Band 6.
From my understanding the Modern and Ancient HSC exams are marked fairly similarly, so this is more a general advice post for both courses. However Ancient History is what I'm way more familiar with, so if someone has different suggestions for Modern than what I've said here, definitely listen to them over me.
Alright, onto the random tips now:
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PART 1: Note taking tips
Starting with how I structured my Ancient notes - it's actually pretty basic. I had one document for each term (correlating to one doc for each topic, or 'section' in the exam). In that document, I had an overview of the syllabus dot points (highlighted by how well I knew them), any links to useful resources/notes/websites, and then headings for every syllabus dot point. I then put my notes under each syllabus dot point. If you want example on how to do that, most of the comprehensive notes on this site also sort their notes in this way, so just check out a few of those resources to get the idea.
Generally I've found researching outside of what my teacher gives me in class to be really good to do. My best tip for making history notes (without them being too time consuming) is to literally copy other people's past HSC notes. I've actually found a lot of stuff on this site that's been really good. My process was essentially to search up "my topic HSC notes", download whatever free ones I could find, make a 'links list' (just on Google Docs, nothing fancy) of all of those notes, and then go through them and copy whatever information is good onto my document. This really helped me to get good sources, and make sure I wasn't missing any crucial pieces of information or key events (in case my teacher missed them, or I was away and didn't catch up on everything). Using random internet resources others have already spend hours and hours on (research papers, HSC notes, etc) has been an easy, cost-free way of making comprehensive notes for Ancient that has got me good results.
To be honest, history is one of the subjects I personally find it easiest to make notes for, because of how methodical it is. Search up the syllabus, copy the syllabus dot points, and sort/create your notes under those. It's worth remembering that depending on the topic you may only get short answer questions on a dot point, or you may be required to write a whole essay for a dot point, so spend your time and information wisely. You can discover which topics have what styles of questions by looking through past HSC papers - you should get a feel for it pretty quickly.
Relating to when you should make notes, it's never too early to start. You can start making course notes now, before the academic year starts - in fact, I'd encourage it. Both Modern and Ancient are extremely content heavy courses (I noticed a huge shift between years 11 and 12 in terms of content covered), and you'll find yourself flying through material (for example, in Year 12 my class generally covered one syllabus dot point per lesson - which is slightly scary when there's one potential essay per syllabus dot point in the final exam). Having these notes already somewhat done, or at least already being familiar with the content, will mean that you absorb lots of extra information in class, and you have less last minute note taking right before the exam (I've been there, and trust me - when you can do practise responses instead of note taking with that time, you get a much better result). Additionally, having my notes ready fairly fast has meant that I can spend loads of time memorising and doing practise responses, which is a REALLY important step to achieving good marks (give any practise responses to your teacher to mark!! personalised feedback on your work makes it so much easier to improve).
Quickly on memorising sources: I personally find it easiest to memorise using flashcards, but you should memorise however best works for you. With that being said, if you do want to use flashcards to memorise, I can highly recommend Outlearn as the best free resource I have come across for making online flashcards (unlimited cards, unlimited folders, and access to long and short term memorisation modes with customisation all on their free version). You can access the site in their app or in your browser. With that being said, no matter how you memorise best, make sure you dedicate time to it. The history exam is all about proving your knowledge, and to do that you need lots and lots of evidence - it's non-negotiable to get good marks.
--
So I initially wrote this information as a reply to a few questions on the Class of 2025 thread, but after spending over an hour on writing my response, and another half an hour editing my response so it made sense (for some insane reason - I think I just hyperfocused lol), I thought this infodump deserved its own post. Although be warned: it's just over 2500 words, so try not to get overwhelmed by the initial amount of information! These are all things I have learnt throughout the past year and just dumped here, so it's okay if it doesn't all stick or make sense initially.
A bit of context about me: I do Accelerated Ancient History at my school. My Year 11 Prelims mark was sitting at 79%, and I hated the feeling of getting that mark back, so I set a goal for myself to achieve a Band 6 in the Ancient History Course. Somehow, one year later, I've just got a 96% on my trials, an this post is basically a summary of the things I've learnt to improve my mark from a Band 4 to a Band 6.
From my understanding the Modern and Ancient HSC exams are marked fairly similarly, so this is more a general advice post for both courses. However Ancient History is what I'm way more familiar with, so if someone has different suggestions for Modern than what I've said here, definitely listen to them over me.
Alright, onto the random tips now:
--
PART 1: Note taking tips
Starting with how I structured my Ancient notes - it's actually pretty basic. I had one document for each term (correlating to one doc for each topic, or 'section' in the exam). In that document, I had an overview of the syllabus dot points (highlighted by how well I knew them), any links to useful resources/notes/websites, and then headings for every syllabus dot point. I then put my notes under each syllabus dot point. If you want example on how to do that, most of the comprehensive notes on this site also sort their notes in this way, so just check out a few of those resources to get the idea.
Generally I've found researching outside of what my teacher gives me in class to be really good to do. My best tip for making history notes (without them being too time consuming) is to literally copy other people's past HSC notes. I've actually found a lot of stuff on this site that's been really good. My process was essentially to search up "my topic HSC notes", download whatever free ones I could find, make a 'links list' (just on Google Docs, nothing fancy) of all of those notes, and then go through them and copy whatever information is good onto my document. This really helped me to get good sources, and make sure I wasn't missing any crucial pieces of information or key events (in case my teacher missed them, or I was away and didn't catch up on everything). Using random internet resources others have already spend hours and hours on (research papers, HSC notes, etc) has been an easy, cost-free way of making comprehensive notes for Ancient that has got me good results.
To be honest, history is one of the subjects I personally find it easiest to make notes for, because of how methodical it is. Search up the syllabus, copy the syllabus dot points, and sort/create your notes under those. It's worth remembering that depending on the topic you may only get short answer questions on a dot point, or you may be required to write a whole essay for a dot point, so spend your time and information wisely. You can discover which topics have what styles of questions by looking through past HSC papers - you should get a feel for it pretty quickly.
Relating to when you should make notes, it's never too early to start. You can start making course notes now, before the academic year starts - in fact, I'd encourage it. Both Modern and Ancient are extremely content heavy courses (I noticed a huge shift between years 11 and 12 in terms of content covered), and you'll find yourself flying through material (for example, in Year 12 my class generally covered one syllabus dot point per lesson - which is slightly scary when there's one potential essay per syllabus dot point in the final exam). Having these notes already somewhat done, or at least already being familiar with the content, will mean that you absorb lots of extra information in class, and you have less last minute note taking right before the exam (I've been there, and trust me - when you can do practise responses instead of note taking with that time, you get a much better result). Additionally, having my notes ready fairly fast has meant that I can spend loads of time memorising and doing practise responses, which is a REALLY important step to achieving good marks (give any practise responses to your teacher to mark!! personalised feedback on your work makes it so much easier to improve).
Quickly on memorising sources: I personally find it easiest to memorise using flashcards, but you should memorise however best works for you. With that being said, if you do want to use flashcards to memorise, I can highly recommend Outlearn as the best free resource I have come across for making online flashcards (unlimited cards, unlimited folders, and access to long and short term memorisation modes with customisation all on their free version). You can access the site in their app or in your browser. With that being said, no matter how you memorise best, make sure you dedicate time to it. The history exam is all about proving your knowledge, and to do that you need lots and lots of evidence - it's non-negotiable to get good marks.
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