HISTORY-INTEGRATED-J · Common Test for University Admissions (大学入学共通テスト)
HISTORY-INTEGRATED-J/11
History Integrated and Japanese History Inquiry
History: Integrated & Japanese History Inquiry · 2024 · Variant 1
Relative difficulty
Analysis source: National Center for University Entrance Examinations (DNC)
Analysis aligned to the official syllabus and assessment design.
—
Cohort performance
Session statistics from official examination reports
No data available in official reports
Key examiner messages
Top priorities from the principal examiner before you revise
No data available in official reports
Question difficulty map
How candidates performed on each question in this series
No data available in official reports
Assessment objectives
Skill and AO weighting from official examiner commentary
No data available in official reports
Method marks watchlist
Where working, steps, or method marks were commonly lost
No data available in official reports
Recurring mistakes across years
Themes examiners flag in multiple recent sessions for this subject
No data available in official reports
Question choice intelligence
Mean scores and popularity for optional questions (HKDSE electives)
No data available in official reports
Level exemplars
What candidate scripts at each grade level looked like
No data available in official reports
Grade & admission context
How marks relate to grade thresholds and entry standards
No data available in official reports
Deep insights
What top candidates did
Techniques and approaches examiners rewarded in this series
No data available in official reports
Command word playbook
How to match each command word to the expected response style
No data available in official reports
Time traps
Sections where candidates spent disproportionate time relative to marks
No data available in official reports
Syllabus traceability
Topics linked to questions and mark weighting in this session
No data available in official reports
MCQ trap analytics
Commonly chosen wrong options from examiner commentary
No data available in official reports
Topic heatmap across years
Mark concentration by topic and exam year for this subject
No data available in official reports
Difficulty trend
How session difficulty has shifted across recent years
No data available in official reports
Paper comparison
Marks and duration breakdown across papers in this session
No data available in official reports
Marks you can still earn
Where valid approaches outside the mark scheme may still gain credit
No data available in official reports
Practise what examiners flagged
Target weak topics from this report inside the Revui app
No data available in official reports
Self-diagnostic checklist
Key actions before you sit this paper — copy and tick off as you revise
No data available in official reports
Teacher briefing pack
One-page session summary for tutors and classroom review
No data available in official reports
Exam tips
Paper format
- Duration
- 60 min for one subject / 130 min when taking two subjects
- Total marks
- 100
- Weighting
- 100%
- Question types
- Document interpretation, chronology, cause-effect, maps, tables and visual sources
- For each era, memorize five anchors: political authority, land/tax system, foreign relations, dominant production pattern and culture. This prevents source questions from floating without context.
- Modern items often ask how domestic reform, diplomacy, war, trade or social movements responded to external pressure. Study Meiji, Taisho, wartime and postwar Japan with international context attached.
- Ask who produced the source, when, for whom and why. A government decree, private diary, newspaper and later textbook will not carry evidence in the same way.
Common mistakes
Chronology
Knowing facts but placing reforms, wars or treaties in the wrong order.
How to avoid: Create cause chains with dates only at anchor points, then rehearse before/after relationships.
Source interpretation
Treating a source as neutral description without checking author position.
How to avoid: Identify producer, audience and purpose before accepting the statement as evidence.
Modern history
Separating domestic politics from diplomacy and economic change.
How to avoid: For each event, note one domestic cause and one international factor.
Analysis is paraphrased for study purposes. Always verify against the official examiner report and mark scheme.