Thank goodness for this thread! So just to start off, personally, how did you go about memorising the content for exams? Was it via pure rote or seeing how each event follows chronologically.
For internal exams/assessment tasks generally we were provided with a little direction/ a bit of information and indication of the likelihood of a question (excluding trials, where it was more or less a mystery/we had to make educated predictions amongst ourselves).
With regards to this, for internals/externals, it wasn't hard for me personally as I have a decent memory and a knack for the subject.
What you also need to remember is Modern History is not just listing facts, dates, places, names and historiography in an essay. It is creating an argument supported by content you have learnt, using relevant historiography to support your argument.
Anyway a few tips would be:
1. Make your notes early and then summarize them later on. (I didn't personally do this, I still hadn't by the HSC done full notes/summary for Indochina, but relied on someone else's to look over on top of my own work). This will help you learn your content well.
2. Timelines of important events are great to see the development of issues and can be a tool for remembering years and dates, by the end of the course however you'll have a pretty decent idea off the top of your head on the years events happen, IMO. Also chuck laws in to your time line if they are relevant to the syllabus e.g. The Nuremberg Laws of 1935.
3. Possibly the thing that helped the most was practice essays, a healthy amount of practice essays! Give them to your teacher to mark. Towards the HSC I was doing a fair few focusing on potential questions (unfortunately none specifically came up), however it really helped let information stick for me. I also did not memorize these essays, I obviously knew lines from them and certain historiography but if I was to get the exact same question in a exam I would not be able to spit it out word for word. In my opinion, they're practice essays for a reason, memorizing essays are risky to rely on and do not really show a flare for the subject (Inb4 HSC is a game).... They are of course beneficial at essay technique and allowing points to stick, so definitely do a fair amount of practice essays and get them marked. (If you ever want to send me one go for it).
4. While history is ROTE based in nature, I don't think you can rely on it to be great at history. It is the combination of knowing your key issues and in depth knowledge of the subject and being able to formulate a response which combines all the ingredients including your own argument and historiography to create a masterpiece.
Okay, so long story short.. Preparing for exams is subjective in nature, what may work for one person may not be the best for another. Use a combination of ROTE and seeing how events follow chronologically, combined with your intellect and passion for the subject to go beyond memorizing content. Oh and discussion with fellow students is great at allowing information to be articulated and be remembered.
Notes/Timelines-->Summaries/Historiography-->Practice essays-->Discussion with fellow students.
Anyway, I hope this was some help. I do tend to go off on tangents.. If you need anything clarified feel free to ask.