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Primary, Secondary and Tertiary

Published on Nov 18, 2015

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

Primary, Secondary and Tertiary

Sources
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What is a primary source?

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First-hand, authoritative accounts produced at the time of the event by a person who experienced it.

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Examples of Primary Sources

  • Letters, diaries, or journals
  • Sacred or instructional texts
  • First-hand newspaper reports
  • Research data & surveys
  • Speeches / autobiographies / memoirs
  • Creative works: Plays, paintings, songs, etc.
  • Original photographs
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What is a secondary source?

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Interprets, critiques, or draws conclusions from primary sources. Often includes an analysis of an event that was discussed or featured in the primary source.

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Examples of Secondary Sources

  • Textbooks (may also be considered tertiary)
  • Essays or reviews
  • Articles that analyze or discuss ideas or events
  • Criticisms or commentaries

What is a tertiary source?

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Generally provides an overview or summary of a topic and may contain both primary and secondary sources. Information is entirely factual and does not include analysis or critique.

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Examples of Tertiary Sources

  • Textbooks
  • Almanacs
  • Bibliographies or abstracts
  • Encyclopedias, Wikipedia
  • Databases

What are the advantages of using all 3 source types in a paper?

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Tips:

  • It makes more sense to find these sources opposite of their naming.
  • Begin with a tertiary source to learn background knowledge, then move on to a secondary source.
  • By using a secondary source, you can discover primary sources.
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OR
If you already know of primary sources you wish to use, use these sources as keywords to find secondary sources that analyze and critique them.

Think-Puzzle-Explore

Split your notecard into 3 equal parts and add these headings.
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Think:
Based on what you've read and learned in class, what do you think you know about this topic?

Puzzle:

  • What questions or puzzles do you have?
  • What would be interesting to investigate and learn more about?
  • What are you curious about?
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Explore:

  • How can we explore these questions / puzzles?
  • Where could you get further information? What sources would be worth exploring?
  • How would you frame your search keywords?
  • What excites you about this topic?
  • What is worrisome about this topic?
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