Overview
Continuity and change over time, often called CCOT, asks you to track what changed and what stayed the same across a historical period. On AP European History, this skill is useful for MCQs, SAQs, DBQs, and LEQs because many prompts ask you to explain patterns across decades or centuries.
AP European History assesses Skill 5, Making Connections, in multiple-choice questions, at least one short-answer question, the DBQ, and the LEQ. The DBQ can draw from 1600-2001. LEQ choices usually cover 1450-1700, 1648-1914, or 1815-2001.
What CCOT Requires
A strong CCOT answer identifies both movement and persistence. Change might include new institutions, technologies, ideologies, economic systems, borders, or social relationships. Continuity might include older power structures, beliefs, inequalities, regional patterns, or recurring debates.
The key is to connect the pattern to the time frame. Do not simply say that something "changed a lot." Explain what the starting point was, what the ending point was, and what stayed recognizable across the transition.
Tracking Patterns Across Periods
Use a simple before, during, and after structure:
- Before: What was true at the start of the period?
- During: What developments pushed change or preserved continuity?
- After: What looked different by the end, and what still looked similar?
| Period | Useful CCOT pattern |
|---|---|
| 1450-1648 | Religious authority fractured, while states and churches still competed to shape belief and political order. |
| 1648-1815 | State power and Enlightenment political ideas changed, while hierarchy and dynastic politics remained important. |
| 1815-1914 | Industrialization and nationalism transformed Europe, while class inequality and empire continued to structure power. |
| 1914-present | War, ideology, decolonization, and integration changed Europe, while debates over sovereignty and rights continued. |
Writing a CCOT Thesis
A CCOT thesis should include a clear change and a clear continuity. It can be one sentence:
From [start date] to [end date], [topic] changed because [specific development], but [specific continuity] remained important because [historical explanation].
This structure works because it answers both sides of the skill. If the prompt asks for the extent of change, decide whether the changes outweighed the continuities or the continuities limited the changes.
Evidence Moves That Work
- Use chronological evidence to show development over time.
- Pair a change with a continuity in the same paragraph when possible.
- Explain why the pattern matters to the broader course theme, such as state power, labor, empire, ideology, reform, or social hierarchy.
- Use turning points carefully. A turning point matters because it changes the direction, scale, or speed of a larger pattern.
Common Mistakes
- Only writing about change: Continuity is part of the skill, not an optional add-on.
- Using one isolated event: CCOT needs a pattern across time, not one moment.
- Forgetting the dates: The time frame tells you which evidence belongs in the argument.
- Treating continuity as "nothing changed": Continuity means a pattern persisted, even if it adapted.
Practice
Try this prompt: Evaluate the extent of change in European state power from 1648 to 1815.
Make a two-column chart with changes on one side and continuities on the other. Circle the evidence that best shows a broad pattern, not just a single event.