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Primary and Secondary Resources

Primary and Secondary Resources. What is a Primary Source?. Primary Source. “First hand accounts” from someone who personally witnessed or experienced an event.

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Primary and Secondary Resources

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  1. Primary and Secondary Resources

  2. What is a Primary Source?

  3. Primary Source • “First hand accounts” from someone who personally witnessed or experienced an event. • They include artifacts (relics), documents (diaries, newspaper articles), pictures, paintings, poetry, and art from a given time period.

  4. Letters/Diary Entries

  5. Artifacts

  6. Paintings, Music, Poetry, Art

  7. What is a Secondary Source?

  8. Secondary Sources • “Second hand accounts” (or 3rd or 4th) from someone who did not personally witness or experience an event. • They include textbooks, research books, encyclopedias, articles in books or on a website. • They usually describe, explain or analyze and event.

  9. Textbooks

  10. Research Books

  11. Questions to Consider • Where did this information come from? • Who is the author? • How does the author know these details? • Was the author present at the time of the event or at the event itself? • What is the author’s perspective? • How might the author’s perspective be different from someone else’s who was present at the same event?

  12. Example • Imagine that you are looking at a diary entry from the revolutionary war. • How might a diary entry from a soldier in the Continental Army differ from a diary entry from a Redcoat soldier?

  13. So What? • Both primary and secondary sources are valuable in our search for historical understanding. • Both types of sources may be subjective based on the author’s point of view. • It is essential to evaluate each source before determining its value.

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