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Research Action Plan (Sustainability): Primary and Secondary Sources

Year 10 Elective Geography

YouTube

Primary and secondary sources are the two main types of sources you’ll use for your research. This video will walk you through what their differences are and when to use which.

Primary Sources

Primary Sources are immediate, first-hand accounts of a topic, from people who had a direct connection with it. Primary sources can include:

Texts of laws and other original documents.

Newspaper reports, by reporters who witnessed an event or who quote people who did.

Speeches, diaries, letters and interviews - what the people involved said or wrote.

Original research.

Datasets, survey data, such as census or economic statistics.

Photographs, video, or audio that capture an event.

Primary Source examples

  • diaries, correspondence, ships' logs.
  • original documents e.g. birth certificates, trial transcripts.
  • biographies, autobiographies, manuscripts.
  • interviews, speeches, oral histories.
  • case law, legislation, regulations, constitutions.

 

 

Secondary Sources

Secondary Sources are one step removed from primary sources, though they often quote or otherwise use primary sources. They can cover the same topic, but add a layer of interpretation and analysis. Secondary sources can include:

Most books about a topic.

Analysis or interpretation of data.

Scholarly or other articles about a topic, especially by people not directly involved.

Documentaries (though they often include photos or video portions that can be considered primary sources).

Secondary Source examples

  • journal articles that comment on or analyse research.
  • textbooks.
  • dictionaries and encyclopedias.
  • books that interpret, analyse.
  • political commentary.
  • biographies.
  • dissertations.
  • newspaper editorial/opinion pieces.