Exam-style question
Try this first
Which option best separates AO3 analysis from AO4 evaluation for Data response and evidence use? Variation 3: Use economic evidence to support analysis and evaluation.
- A.Use AO3 to build the cause and effect chain, then use AO4 to judge context, magnitude, stakeholders and time period.
- B.Use analysis and evaluation as interchangeable labels with no judgement.
- C.A judgement can be an unsupported opinion without evidence.
- D.Give an unsupported judgement about AQA Economics paper structure without evidence, context or command-word focus.
Model answer
What a good answer should say
- Use economic evidence to support analysis and MCQ 3: The correct answer is Use AO3 to build the cause and effect chain, then use AO4 to judge context, magnitude, stakeholders and time period...
- This choice fits the synoptic economic reasoning required by the learning objective.
Explanation
Why this works
Use economic evidence to support analysis and is tested here through the prompt: "Which option best separates AO3 analysis from AO4 evaluation for Data response and evidence use? Variation 3: Use".
The correct option is "The correct answer is Use AO3 to build the cause and effect chain, then use AO4 to judge context, magnitude, stakeholders and time period.." because it keeps the answer anchored to Use economic evidence to support analysis and rather than a nearby misconception. The reasoning chain is: define the concept, apply it to Synoptic economic principles and issues, identify the economic mechanism, and check the consequence against scale, time period, stakeholder effects and reliability of the evidence.
A tempting distractor usually confuses a change in demand with quantity demanded, analysis with evaluation, or a short-run effect with a long-run judgement. For AQA Economics 7136, the best choice is the one that preserves the cause, transmission mechanism and consequence without adding an unsupported policy claim.
Common mistake
No common mistake is linked to this question yet.
