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Primary and Secondary Sources
What are they and why do you need to know?
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Credits
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Primary Sources Primary sources are the most important and reliable sources of information. Primary sources were created during the time period being studied. Primary sources are not just books! They can be anything or anyone who was there when an event happened.
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Primary Source Examples
Primary sources can be a person
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Primary Sources Primary sources can be a piece of clothing from the time period.
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Primary Sources Primary sources can be a map, a coin, a stamp, or a diploma.
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Primary Sources Primary sources can be diaries or autobiographies.
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Primary Sources Primary sources can be newspapers from the time in which the event happened.
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Primary Sources Primary sources can be government documents, personal records, or audio/video recordings.
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Secondary Sources A secondary source is an account of the past created by someone writing about events after they happened.
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Secondary Sources A secondary source might be a Social Studies textbook that has an exact quote of Dr. Martin Luther King’s I Have A Dream speech OR A book on the Civil War that has a picture from the Battle of Gettysburg
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Primary or secondary? Diary kept by John Smith, a soldier in the Confederate Army published in a series of Alabama papers.
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Primary or Secondary? A photograph of George Washington Carver taken in 1898?
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Primary or Secondary? Scrapbook kept by Mrs. Mary Smith in 1883 with copies of recipes and household hints
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Primary or Secondary? Biography of George Washington
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Primary or Secondary? Newspaper article about the assassination of President John Kennedy, written on Nov. 23, 1963
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Primary or Secondary? Television mini-series about President Franklin Roosevelt’s life
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Primary or Secondary? Photo album with pictures of classmates at Tuskegee Institute in 1923
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Primary or Secondary? Article about President Barack Obama in People magazine in 2008.
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Primary or Secondary? Information about Cherokee Native Americans in World Book Encyclopedia
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Primary or Secondary? Letter from Emily Smith written to her friend Pamela Jones, May 3, 1826 describing her journey by covered wagon from North Carolina to Huntsville, Alabama and the log cabin her father was building
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Primary or Secondary? Matthew Mason’s will, dated 1896
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Primary or Secondary? Cassette tape of an interview with Dr. Lee describing his medical practice in Hamilton County in the 1920’s
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Primary or Secondary? Map of Tennessee, drawn by a cartographer in 1823
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Internet Source Reliability
Author's education, training, and/or experience in a field relevant to the information. Look for biographical information, the author's title or position of employment Author provides contact information ( or snail mail address, phone number) Organizational authorship from a known and respected organization (corporate, governmental, or non-profit) Author's reputation or standing among peers. Author's position (job function, title)
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URL…….Who to Believe If the site name ends with .edu, it is most likely an educational institution. Even so, you should be aware of political bias. If a site ends in .gov, it is most likely a reliable government web site. Government sites are usually good sources for statistics and objective reports. Sites that end in .org are usually non-profit organizations. They can be very good sources or very poor sources, so you'll have to take care to research their possible agendas or political biases, if they exist. A reputable journal or magazine should contain a bibliography for every article. The list of sources within that bibliography should be pretty extensive, and it should include scholarly, non-Internet sources.
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