Primary or secondary sources
Primary sources
- are the original materials or evidence to be analyzed, evaluated, contextualized, or synthesized in the research process.
- in the Social Science and Humanities, they are usually from the time period under study and offer first-hand accounts or direct evidence responsive to the research question.
- in the Science & Engineering fields, they are the first articles published formally describing a research project or study.
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Some examples of primary sources include:
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Secondary sources
- analyze, evaluate, contextualize, or synthesize evidence. They often give second-hand accounts based on engagement with primary sources.
- in the Social Science and Humanities, they comment on or analyze texts, oral communications, artifacts, or archives of primary sources.
- in the Science & Engineering fields, because many primary sources are scholarly articles reporting first-hand on new studies or research, the secondaries often synthesize or analyze many such results.
Some examples of Secondary sources include:
Social Sciences & Humanities | Science & Engineering | |
Secondary Sources |
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Adapted from "Primary, Secondary & Tertiary Sources" (http://collegeresearch.gmu.edu/primary-secondary-tertiary/) by George Mason University licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
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