Primary vs. Secondary Sources: The Differences Explained | Scribbr 🎓 - YouTube

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When writing an academic essay or research paper, you have to gather information and
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evidence from a variety of sources.
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Primary sources provide raw information and first-hand evidence.
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Whereas secondary sources provide second-hand information and commentary from other researchers.
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Wanna learn more about the differences and understand when to use which?
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Then keep watching!
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Hi, I'm Jessica from Scribbr, here to help you achieve your academic goals.
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A primary source is anything that gives you direct evidence about the people, events,
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or phenomena that you are researching.
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They will usually be the main objects of your analysis.
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The form of primary sources depends on the subject you’re studying.
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In history, primary sources are essential for learning about the events of the past.
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They can be anything produced at the time, such as letters, photographs, newspapers,
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and official records.
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In art and literature, your primary sources are the artistic works you’re analyzing
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– for example, poems, paintings or films.
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And in the social sciences, primary sources are usually empirical studies or data that
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you collected yourself – anything from interview transcripts to social media posts.
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For example, say I’m writing a paper about political communication, and I want to analyze
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Barack Obama’s election victory speech.
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If I quote Obama directly in my paper, the video or transcript of the speech is the primary
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source.
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Check out our article here for more examples!
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But then what is a secondary source?
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A secondary source is anything that describes, interprets, evaluates, or analyzes information
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from primary sources.
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In a paper or essay, most of your secondary sources will be academic books or journal
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articles.
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But they might also include: Encyclopedias and textbooks that summarize
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information Reviews and essays that evaluate or interpret
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primary sources Or news stories or documentaries that report
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on your topic When you cite a secondary source, it’s usually
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not to analyze it directly.
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Instead, you’ll probably test its arguments against new evidence or use its ideas to help
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formulate your own.
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For example, in my political communication paper, if I cite an academic article that
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also analyzed Obama's speeches, then I’m using a secondary source.
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I can also use secondary sources that focus on other famous political speeches, to gain
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a better understanding of the topic and how other researchers have approached it.
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Most papers should use both primary and secondary sources.
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They complement each other to help you build a convincing argument.
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Primary sources make your work more original and credible, while secondary sources show
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how your work relates to existing research.
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Secondary sources often bring together a large number of primary sources that would be difficult
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and time-consuming to gather by yourself, so they’re important to help you gain a
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full understanding of your topic.
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Use primary sources when you want to: Make new discoveries
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Provide your own original analysis Or give direct evidence for your arguments
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Use secondary sources when you want to: Provide background information on the topic
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Support or contrast your arguments with other researchers’ ideas
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Or use information from primary sources that you can’t access directly, for example, private
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letters or physical documents located elsewhere.
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Now no matter which kind of source you've used, make sure to cite it correctly - it's
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super easy with Scribbr's citation generator!
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If you’re not sure how to do in-text citations, check out this video here!