Primary, Secondary, & Tertiary Research
Contents & Navigation
autobiography
(+ biography)
case studies
contracts
correspondence
personal papers
(diaries, journals, etc.)
dissertations
(theses, academic papers)
original productions
(artistic, dramatic, film)
|
first-person accounts
historical documents
(constitutions, bylaws)
interviews
laboratory data
(lab notebooks, etc.)
maps
meeting minutes
original manuscripts
original research
|
patents
pictorial works
(photographs, paintings)
religious documents
(holy books, scripture)
speeches
surveys
(survey data, findings)
technical reports
travel descriptions
fiction, poetry, drama
|
Primary Research Sources
Sources that contain raw, original, non-interpreted and unevaluated information.
Primary sources allow researchers to get as close as possible to original ideas, events, and empirical research. Such sources may include publication of the results of empirical observations, first hand accounts of events, and creative works.
In the humanities and social sciences, primary sources are the direct evidence or first-hand accounts of events without secondary analysis or interpretation. A primary source is a work that was created or written contemporary with the period or subject being studied.
biography
criticism
interpretation
analysis
discussion
opinions
social policy
|
analysis
dissertations
(theses, academic papers)
editorials
film documentaries
literature reviews
commentaries
|
journals
monographs
blog posts
commentary tracks
study materials
teaching materials
text reviews
|
Secondary Research Sources
Sources that digest, analyze, evaluate and interpret the information contained within primary (or secondary) sources.
Secondary sources offer an interpretation of information gathered from primary sources and often include commentary, discussion, analysis, and/or argument.
almanacs
travel guides
field guides
timelines
Indexes
bibliographies
concordances
databases
|
handbooks
manuals
registers
statistics
tables
compilations
bibliographic essays
bibliographic summaries
|
chronologies
dictionaries
encyclopedias
directories
encyclopedias
guidebooks
textbooks
compendia
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Tertiary Research Sources
Sources that compile, aggregate, summarize, analyze, and digest secondary sources.
May also present subjective commentary and analysis (which are characteristics of secondary sources).
Tertiary sources provide overviews of topics by synthesizing information gathered from other resources. They often provide data in a convenient or condensed form or provide information with context by which to interpret it.
Tertiary sources often include references back to the primary and/or secondary sources. They can be a good place to look up facts or get a general overview of a subject, but they rarely contain original material.
Scholarly vs. Non-Scholarly Sources
What’s the Difference Between Scholarly & Non-Scholarly Sources? (What to Look For)
SCHOLARLY | NON-SCHOLARLY | |
PURPOSE | to inform or persuade scholars; to inform public policy; to guide additional research | to inform or persuade the general public or interested communities; to shape public opinion; to share |
AUDIENCE | researchers, academics, faculty, scholars | public |
AUTHOR(S) | scholar, researcher, expert | journalist, general writer |
PUBLISHER | professional association, university, scholarly press | commercial publisher |
INCLUSION | relevance, importance | topical appeal, current events |
REVIEW | peer review, blind peer review | editorial, none |
DICTION | scholarly, specialized, discipline specific | non-technical, simple, conversational, general |
EXAMPLES | scholarly journals, peer reviewed monographs & edited collections | news media, commentary, opinion, personal |