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Why is it important to know where information for research comes from? Warm Up: Think about your answer to the following question QUIETLY NO SPIRALS
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Blind Sort With your group members, group them into a logical way that makes sense for your group. Be ready to explain your groupings to the class Activity
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Blind Source Answers Primary ResourcesSecondary Resources ArtHistorical Textbooks Music RecordingsBiographies DiariesPublished Stories LettersMovies of Historical Events PhotographsMaps Video and Film Sound RecordingsNewspapers InterviewsMagazines
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Besides original and interpreted, what are other words you can use to describe the difference between primary and secondary resources?
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Your Ideas on Primary vs Secondary 0 Needed 0 Important 0 Accurate Info 0 Historical Proof 0 Straight Forward 0 Paper Oriented 0 Physically Look At 0 Main/ Original 0 First Hand/ Written by them 0 Artistic 0 Made before technology 0 Not as Important 0 Not originally Recorded 0 Internet Based 0 Re-enactment 0 Information questionable 0 Not written by the original person 0 Not Artistic 0 Made by technology
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Primary & Secondary Sources
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Primary vs Secondary Sources 0 I will analyze historical sources for accuracy by examining primary and secondary sources to understand a historical events. 0 This means I will be able to justify the reason for using primary/ secondary sources when learning about a historical event.
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Key Vocabulary Write down on page 7&8 0 Source 0 Primary 0 Secondary 0 First Hand 0 Second Hand
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Primary vs Secondary Resources In order to study the past, historians use sources from the past…
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Primary vs. Secondary 0 Original, first-hand account of an event or time period 0 Usually written or made during or close to the event or time period 0 Original, creative writing or works of art 0 Factual, not interpretive 0 Analyzes and interprets primary sources 0 Second-hand account of an historical event 0 Interprets creative work
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What It Really Means Primary Secondary Firsthand Source Secondhand
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Photo Activity Photo Activity Example
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Telephone Activity Example :
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Think/ Pair/ Share 0 Think back to the activities… 0 What is a primary source? 0 What is a secondary source? 0 What makes them different?
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Examples of Primary Sources 0 Letters 0 Photographs 0 Interviews 0 With your elbow partner, identify 3 more primary sources
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Examples of Secondary Sources 0 Our classroom textbook 0 Movie Reviews 0 Events in History textbooks 0 With your elbow partner, identify 3 more secondary sources
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Additional Examples of Primary vs Secondary Diaries, journals, and letters Newspaper and magazine articles (factual accounts) Official Documents/ Government records (census, marriage, military) Photographs, maps, postcards, posters Recorded or transcribed speeches Interviews with participants or witnesses (e.g., The Civil Right Movement) Interviews with people who lived during a particular time (e.g., genocide in Rwanda) Songs, Plays, novels, stories Paintings, drawings, and sculptures Biographies Histories Literary Criticism Book, Art, and Theater Reviews Newspaper articles that interpret
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What about Wikipedia???Wikipedia 0 Do NOT use Wikipedia as either a primary source or a secondary source in your research. 0 Use Wikipedia as a starting point for your research and as a way to locate actual Primary and Secondary sources
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Thinking Maps- Bubble Map 0 Using a bubble map, what are other examples of primary sources that you see within the classroom? (think back to the opening activities to help you out)
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Processing- Complete on pg 13 of your spiral In a well written paragraph, answer the following questions: 1. How does a historian come to understand the past? 2. Why is it important to use both primary and secondary sources when looking at historical events?
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