Primary and Secondary Resources: A Research Guide
This guide explains what primary and secondary sources are, and gives some examples to help you select materials for your assignments.
Primary Sources
Secondary Sources
Examples
A Word of Caution
For More Information...
Primary Sources
A primary source provides first-hand information on the topic. The author personally participated in the event under discussion, such as a science experiment, a humanitarian mission, or the writing of a novel. The work has not been changed or analyzed by another person or organization.
Primary sources include:
- Original research – results of experiments, interviews, questionnaires, studies, surveys, archaeological digs
- Personal works – diaries, identification papers, journals, letters, memoirs and autobiographies (not biographies), speeches, theses (reporting original research)
- Government records – Parliamentary proceedings (Hansard), bills, acts, treaties, census data, court transcripts
- Corporate records – account books, e-mails, invoices, purchase orders, minutes, annual reports
- Works of literature – novels, plays, poetry, short stories
- Art and artefacts – paintings, sculptures, photographs, coins, objects
- Journal articles reporting original research (see first bullet above)
- Original audio and video recordings – feature films, news footage, performances
- Music – notated (print), recorded
- Other – advertisements, data files, maps, newspaper reports “from the field,” patents, posters, and public opinion polls
Secondary Sources
Secondary sources present an argument, interpretation, conclusion, or summary based upon information found in primary sources. In other words, the authors gained their information second hand.
Secondary sources include:
- Biographies (not autobiographies)
- Books (textbooks, literary criticism)
- Editorials and commentaries
- Encyclopaedias
- Journal articles (not reporting original research)
- Reviews
- Theses (not reporting original research)
Examples for Various Subjects and Disciplines
Commerce
- Primary source: Export company’s annual report
- Secondary source: Book on profits of Canadian export companies
English
- Primary source: Huckleberry Finn
- Secondary source: Book review of Huckleberry Finn
Fine arts
- Primary source: Michaelangelo’s David
- Secondary source: Book describing and illustrating famous sculptures
Music
- Primary source: Mozart’s Requiem
- Secondary source: Musical analysis of Mozart's Requiem
Physics
- Primary source: Findings of an MRI study at UNB
- Secondary source: Article promoting advances in MRI research at Canadian universities
Psychology
- Primary source: UBC survey of drug addicts and their activities
- Secondary source: Book about drug addiction in Canada
Sociology
A Word of Caution
How you use an item may determine whether it is a primary or a secondary resource. In order to categorize it, think about how the resource is relevant to your work.
For example:
- A history textbook from 1867 might be used as a primary source for a study of confederation-era textbooks (since it is one), or as a secondary source for an essay on the history of Ancient Greece (since that’s what it’s about).
- A documentary on the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939) might be used for its primary material (interviews with soldiers), or its secondary material (the voice-over commentary).
For More Information on Primary and Secondary Sources:
Ask a librarian or go to:
Exploring primary sources (University of British Columbia) http://www.library.ubc.ca/hss/primary.html
How do I find primary and secondary sources? (Northwestern Michigan College) http://www.nmc.edu/library/how/primary.html
Identifying primary and secondary sources: a preliminary guide (L. Gonzalez, Indiana University)
http://www.indiana.edu/~librcsd/libguide/ps.html
Lester, J.D. & Lester J. (2002). Writing research papers: a complete guide. New York: Longman. REF LB 2369.L4 2002
Library research: finding primary sources (University of California, Berkeley) http://www.lib.berkeley.edu./TeachingLib/Guides/PrimarySources.html
Created November 2004 / EM
