Learning objective
Understand the meaning of the prescribed key concepts and terminology for liberalism.
Read the explanation, check the common trap, then practise with flashcards and questions.
At a glance
0
Flashcards
0
Questions
Topic
Core ideologies
Subtopic
Liberalism
Study support
Understand this objective
Quick explanation
Understand the meaning of the prescribed key concepts and terminology for liberalism
- This point belongs to Core ideologies, especially Liberalism.
- You need to be able to understand the meaning of the prescribed key concepts and terminology for liberalism.
- The key ideas to know are understand, prescribed, and concepts.
- Use the linked flashcards and practice questions to check recall, then practise applying the idea in an exam-style answer.
Key concepts
Why it matters
This objective helps connect Liberalism to exam-style questions, flashcards, and revision notes for Core ideologies.
Quick student answer
What should an politics answer explain about understand the meaning of the prescribed key concepts and terminology for liberalism?
Direct answer
For Politics, this page helps you revise understand the meaning of the prescribed key concepts and terminology for liberalism in Core ideologies. Focus on the key terms, the exam command, and a clear answer that matches the question. Key terms to check are political ideology and prescribed argument and Liberalism focus.
Key terms
- political ideology and prescribed argument: political ideology and prescribed argument is an AO1 concept in AQA A-Level Politics 7152 for Understand the meaning of the prescribed key concepts and terminology for liberalism.. Define the constitutional principle, institution or political idea accurately, then distinguish political ideology, political party, and core versus optional ideology routes.
- Liberalism focus: Use Liberalism focus by explaining its role in UK government or politics. Link the point to rights, accountability or the distribution of power before reaching a supported judgement.
Common trap
Liberalism Politics mistake 1: Add a competing viewpoint, test it with political evidence, explain its limit and reach a substantiated judgement. Keep AO1, AO2 and AO3 distinct.
Related questions
Try this as a practice card
Question 1 of 4
Choose an answer, get feedback, then move sideways through the set.
Flashcard prompts
Flip through the key recall cards
Flashcard 1 of 4
Practise next
Revision tools
Choose how to practise
Flashcards0 linked cards
Practice Questions0 linked questions
Revision notestopic notes
Open the full topic revision notes when you are ready to review this objective in context.
Open revision notesRelated learning objectives
- Analyse and evaluate debates about the nature of liberalism.
Liberalism
- Analyse and evaluate core liberal ideas and values concerning the individual and freedom.
Liberalism
- Analyse and evaluate classical liberalism and modern or progressive liberalism.
Liberalism
- Relate John Locke's natural rights, liberty, individualism and fiduciary power of government to liberal thinking on human nature, the state, society and the economy.
Liberalism
- Relate John Stuart Mill's criticism of hedonism, freedom, integrity, self-respect and distinction between self-regarding and other-regarding actions to liberal thinking.
Liberalism
