The 8 Mark "How Useful are Sources A & B" Question (Edexcel GCSE History): Revision Note
Exam code: 1HI0
Summary of Question 2 (a)
Question 2 (a) requires you to evaluate how useful two sources are for a historian investigating a specific issue
You should:
Refer to the content and provenance of the sources
Use relevant own knowledge to support your points
Make a clear judgement on how useful each source is for the enquiry
It will always be based on the historic environment: The British sector of the Western Front
Amount of marks | 8 |
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The time that you should spend on the question | No more than 15 minutes 5 minutes of planning 10 minutes of writing |
An example of the type of question you may encounter can be seen below:

In previous years, this question has focused on the following topics in Medicine in Britain:
Year of Exam | Question Topic |
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2018 | The treatment of battle injuries by medical staff (opens in a new tab) |
2019 | The work of the stretcher bearers (opens in a new tab) |
2020 | The effects of a gas attack (opens in a new tab) |
2021 | The use of blood transfusions (opens in a new tab) |
2022 | The problem of trench foot (opens in a new tab) |
2023 | New techniques being used on the Western Front to deal with injuries (opens in a new tab) |
2024 | The work of medical staff in the Casualty Clearing Stations (CCS) |
What is a historical enquiry?
A historical enquiry is when historians ask questions, select evidence and make judgments about the past
Question 2 (a) is always linked to a historical enquiry about the Western Front
If you do not link your answer to the enquiry in the question, you cannot score more than 2 marks
Using the content and provenance of a source
A historical source is made up of:
The provenance
The background of the source
The content
The information the source shows or describes
Provenance
The provenance appears at the top of each source and usually tells you:
Who created it
What type of source it is (e.g. a diary)
When it was produced
Where it was created
For the example question, here is a breakdown of the provenance of Source A:
Who | Sergeant Robert McKay, a stretcher-bearer |
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What | A diary |
When | Written in 1917 |
Where | The Third Battle of Ypres |
How is provenance important for a "How useful..." question?
Use the provenance to consider:
Is the source typical of what you would expect the author to say or show?
Is the source accurate if it was produced years after the event?
What factors could have influenced their opinion?
Content
Finding the content of a source depends on the type of source you have
Written sources
Read the text closely to understand what it tells you about the issue in the question
Look for:
The author’s overall viewpoint on the enquiry
Key quotes about the enquiry
Visual sources
Look carefully at what the image shows
Ask yourself:
What is happening in the image?
Who or what is included or left out?
What message is being communicated?
Is anything staged or exaggerated?
How is content important for a "How useful..." question?
Use the content to:
Make inferences about the enquiry
Provide evidence for your judgement on the source's usefulness
Making judgements in a “How useful are sources A and B?” question
The 8-mark "How Useful” question requires you to make a judgement
Common mistakes in judgement questions
Saying that neither source is useful
Avoiding a clear decision by using phrases like “kind of” or “maybe”
Focusing on reliability rather than usefulness
All sources are useful for a historian but not all sources are reliable
A photograph taken of a Regimental Aid Post by the British Army might be staged
However, it tells historians about how the Army assured citizens back home that their loved ones were well-cared for
What makes a good judgement?
Refers to specific content from the source
Uses the provenance clearly
Applies relevant contextual knowledge
Links back to the focus of the question
For the example question, this is the problems involved in transporting injured soldiers on the Western Front
The limitations of sources
Your judgement does not need to include limitations to get full marks
Students’ responses are often given higher marks if they only focus on the source's strengths
However, if you include a limitation, you must make sure the limitation is:
Supported by knowledge
Focused on the question
Relevant to your answer
"How useful are sources A and B?" question structure
You will find the sources in the Sources Booklet
This is a separate insert from your answer booklet

Your answer should include:
An explanation of how useful each source is for the enquiry
Use of content and provenance
Specific and accurate own knowledge
Your answer could be written in PEE paragraphs
P — Make a point about the question
Make it clear how useful the source is
Use the source to make an inference about the issue in the question
E — Use information from the source and knowledge to support the point you have made
Your knowledge should be specific
E — Explain why this shows that the source is useful
Focus on the given issue in the question
To get full marks, your judgement must use:
The source's content
The source's provenance
Your own knowledge
You will need two paragraphs
Source A should be the focus of Paragraph One
Source B should be the focus of Paragraph Two
You will achieve 8 marks for your analysis and evaluation of how useful both sources are for the enquiry (S)
Worked example of a "How useful are sources A and B?" question
Worked Example
2 (a) Study Sources A and B in the Sources Booklet.
How useful are Sources A and B for an enquiry into problems involved in transporting injured soldiers on the Western Front?
Explain your answer, using Sources A and B and your knowledge of the historical context.
(8)

Answer
Source A is useful in an enquiry into the problems involved in transporting injured soldiers on the Western Front because it shows the difficult terrain that stretcher-bearers had to work in (S). McKay states "The mud in some cases is up to our waists" (S). From my own knowledge, I know that there was torrential rain in some places on the Western Front. This was an issue as the rain along with the constant artillery fire churned up the mud and caused parts of the Western Front to become impassable (S). The source is useful as it was written by Sergeant Robert McKay. McKay was a stretcher-bearer who kept a detailed diary on the conditions at the Third Battle of Ypres. As such, he has key eyewitness knowledge of how hard it was to transport soldiers in these conditions (S).
Source B is also useful for the enquiry because it shows how dangerous it was to transport wounded soldiers from the battlefield (S). The image shows a horse-drawn ambulance which has been hit by an artillery strike (S). From my own knowledge, I know that horse-drawn ambulances were mostly used at the beginning of the war because they struggled to cope with the large number of casualties. They were slow and often shook injured soldiers too much due to struggling to move on the terrain (S). Source B is useful because, as a photograph, it shows the level of destruction that could happen to medical vehicles. However, it is focused on a German horse-drawn ambulance limits its usefulness as British field ambulances may not have suffered incidents as severe as the one shown in Source B (S).
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