KS4 Citizenship Study Guide (A*-G course)
Book Description
This book is full of clear revision notes for GCSE Citizenship students. It covers all of the topics in the current Citizenship Programme of Study, including politics, laws and social issues in a chatty, straightforward style, and it is suitable for the AQA, Edexcel and OCR Short Course GCSEs. Every few pages there are quick warm-up tests to help you remember the important facts. Plus there is a section of exam advice to help you improve your grades.Customer Reviews
Extra support,17 June 2016
Panic buy present for one of my grandsons who was due to take his mock exam and felt he needed some extra support. He got an 'A' grade so I guess it helped him!
citizenship workbook,22 April 2014
My student was very, very pleased with this service and product. I will certainly be a repeat client and recommend my peers.
Key Stage Four Citizenship - The Study Guide,11 June 2009
My son took the 1 year GCSE course in Citizenship and found the study guide very useful for revision. It covered everything he needed, in easy to understand sections. HeI read the whole book through before the exam and noted key points from it.
OK.....,11 June 2012
Although I bought this for citizenship in my last year of GCSE to AS Level, it doesn't actually cover a great deal of the stuff that is necessary for the exams. It is easy to use though and has some helpful tips for exam prep throughout but other than that, its not very good
5*,1 November 2015
Item arrived as described. Quick delivery and good quality product. Would recommend and use seller again..
Five Stars,8 June 2018
Perfect
Some serious mistakes,25 October 2010
This is a useful book.Much of the subject matter is about law. Having recently completed a law degree at the age of 54, I am coming across some quite serious legal mistakes as I work through the text with my 15 year-old son. The section on Human Rights is a bit of a mess because it confuses the European Union with the Council of Europe.My son likes the book but finds the jokes exasperating.P.S. As we continue to work through this, I am finding more and more errors of substance. The referencing to legislation is particularly bad. Why are concepts like "satisfactory quality" changed to "decent quality"? There seems to be no reason to put a child-like spin on everything. A child will understand that "satisfactory" does not mean perfection. "Decent quality" has no application in law.
Five Stars,17 September 2016
good condition
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