11–12History Extension 11–12 Syllabus
The new History Extension 11–12 Syllabus (2024) is to be implemented from 2026.
2025
- Plan and prepare to teach the new syllabus
2026, Term 4
- Start teaching new syllabus
- Start implementing new Year 12 school-based assessment requirements
2027
- First HSC examination for new syllabus
Content
Year 12
- HX-12-01
analyses different approaches to history and the complexity of factors that shape historiographical perspectives in different eras
- HX-12-02
constructs a position about an area of historiographical interpretation, and discusses and challenges other positions
- HX-12-04
communicates through detailed, well-structured texts to explain, argue, discuss, analyse or evaluate historiographical issues
Historiographical skills
Students use a variety of sources to:
- identify and analyse differing historical and historiographical interpretations or issues
- explain why different producers of history have differing perspectives and approaches
- develop and challenge a view(s) about historical or historiographical issues.
The historiographical skills are to be integrated with the selected case study.
Students explore ONE case study with reference to the producers of history, and their perspectives and approaches, which have led to change in the THREE areas of historiographical interpretation. Further information on these areas of historiographical interpretation is provided in syllabus support materials. Students apply their understanding of the following questions to the selected case study:
- Who are the producers of history in different eras?
- How has history been constructed, recorded and presented in different eras?
- Why have approaches to history changed in different eras?
Choose ONE of the following case studies:
- Cleopatra VII
- Athenian democracy
- Rome and the provinces
- Early Christianity
- The collapse of the Western Roman Empire
- The Crusades
- Genghis Khan
- Witch hunts and trials in the early modern era
- Elizabeth I
- Spain and the Mexica
- Catherine the Great
- Napoleon
- Western imperialism in the 19th century
- The Opium Wars
- Winston Churchill
- Appeasement
- The partition of India
- John Fitzgerald Kennedy
- Margaret Thatcher
- The frontier in Australia
- Women convicts in New South Wales
- The Anzacs
Areas of historiographical interpretation
The reasons for Roman imperialism
The nature of Rome’s relationships with the provinces
The impact of Rome on the provinces