primary and secondary sources history detectives
TRANSCRIPT
Primary Source – Any original material from the period or event under consideration
• Firsthand information or records of original ideas• Has not been analyzed, commented
upon or interpreted• May be biased, inaccurate, or
untruthful
Secondary Source – Material that is one or more steps removed from the period or event under consideration.
• Offer commentary, interpretation, or analysis of Primary Sources
• Often will contain Primary Sources• Created by people not directly involved
in the period or event under consideration
• Contain the benefit of hindsight
Primary Sources Secondary Sources• Photographs• Diaries• Military records• Census records• Autobiographies• Speeches• Video footage• Audio recordings• Newspaper clippings• Books written AT THAT
TIME• Interviews• Letters• Scientific findings• Genuine Artifacts
• Textbooks• Biographies• Lectures• General histories• Most journal articles• Most published
books • Webpages
Evaluating Sources
NO SOURCE, NO MATTER WHAT IT IS, IS INHERENTLY RELIABLE!
• You must analyze the source for yourself
• You must determine how a source is biased
• You must determine if a source is both accurate and truthful
Who was present at the signing of the Declaration of Independence?
• Source 1: A Hollywood movie about the American Revolution made in 2001
• Source 2: A Book written by a famous historian who is an expert on the American Revolution, published in 1999.
• IDEA: Authorship matters! Historians base their accounts on multiple primary and secondary sources. Hollywood films have no such standards for historical accuracy.
What was the layout of the Nazi concentration camp Auschwitz?
• Source 1: Interview with an 80 year old Holocaust survivor in 1985
• Source 2: Map of Auschwitz found in Nazi archives
• IDEA: Human memory is notoriously unreliable. We can be truthful but not accurate.
Why were Japanese Americans put into internment camps during WW2?
• Source 1: A government film explaining the internment camps made in 1942
• Source 2: A government report on Japanese internment from 1983, based on declassified government documents.
• IDEA: The purpose of a source has a direct impact on its credibility
What was slavery like in South Carolina?
• Source 1: Interview with a former slave in 1936. The interviewer is an African American man collecting interviews for the Federal Writer’s Project.
• Source 2: Interview with a former slave in 1936. The interviewer is an white woman collecting interviews for the Federal Writer’s Project.
• IDEA: Our audience shapes how we tell stories.
Finish this sentence on your OUTPUT side:
The PRIMARY source I think I would personally enjoy studying the most is: