Business & Finance1 min ago
In It To Win It...
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....Question...When was the Battle of Britain..1918....1940...1945...
answer...1945
This level of ignorance is truly frightening. The young will have no knowledge of even the most recent of our history.
answer...1945
This level of ignorance is truly frightening. The young will have no knowledge of even the most recent of our history.
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.On the contrary OG I think World War 2 is one of the most covered topics in GCSE history.Also what about Margaret, she didn't even know a Linnet was a bird.I said to my Wife if Dale had asked her name she wouldn't have known.Also wonder if it is fixed that the same people keep coming over when they realise they don't know much and therefore the prize pot will be lower.
I learned quite a bit about the battle of Britain ( as did most of the pupils at my secondary school ) from our deputy headmaster, he was a Spitfire pilot during WW2. He used to cover for absent teachers, we only had to ask him a question about the war ( especially the battle of Britain ) and then the lesson became a question and answer session about the war.
Like Chrissa, no-one ever mentioned the war properly - although my Mum did show me a picture of them with 2 German POWs they had befriended and I knew that the road by our house had been built by POW's. It sort of all came together gradually. When I studied History at school - it ended at the build-up to WW1.
I put it all together myself - there was the 'Dambusters' theme on Children's Favourites (or whatever it was called) and lots and lots of old films and then there was reading
When teaching History in the 1990s both WW1 and WW2 were covered, but WW2 was mainly taught in the GCSE course - so it was quite possible that anyone (majority) not taking History GCSE would not know a thing about it.
I put it together myself from radio, films and reading.
I put it all together myself - there was the 'Dambusters' theme on Children's Favourites (or whatever it was called) and lots and lots of old films and then there was reading
When teaching History in the 1990s both WW1 and WW2 were covered, but WW2 was mainly taught in the GCSE course - so it was quite possible that anyone (majority) not taking History GCSE would not know a thing about it.
I put it together myself from radio, films and reading.
70 years ago, isn't the most recent of our history. A lot has happened since then.
And if you are so clever, you might work out that IITWI is not Mastermind. The Programme is not a test of intellect, but a piece of entertainment. If you didn't like it put the 'Yesterday' channel on and another war documentary.
And if you are so clever, you might work out that IITWI is not Mastermind. The Programme is not a test of intellect, but a piece of entertainment. If you didn't like it put the 'Yesterday' channel on and another war documentary.