Research EVALUATING SOURCES Primary vs Secondary Reliability Definition
Research EVALUATING SOURCES Primary vs. Secondary Reliability
Definition Source— Where you get information
Is the source from the original time or event that you are researching? • Primary Source • Secondary Source
Is the source from the original time or event that you are researching? YES Primary Sources A document or item from the time being studied.
Is the source from the original time or event that you are researching? YES Primary Sources • Speeches • Letters • Journals • Artifacts • Interviews • Photographs • Newspaper Article
Is the source from the original time or event that you are researching? NO Secondary Source – Cites primary source – Example—book about the Civil War with a quote from the Gettysburg Address
Is the source from the original time or event that you are researching? • Primary Source – Speeches, letters, journals, interviews, photographs, artifacts • Secondary Source – Book, newspaper or magazine article that refers to a primary source
Reliability • Is this a reliable source to use to get information? • Is the information in this magazine credible (believable), or incredible? • How do we find out?
Reliability Questions to Ask • Author / Creator –Who is this person? • What are her credentials? Is she qualified to write about this? • Do you trust him? What are his biases?
Reliability Questions to Ask • The Writing / Information –Is it accurate? –Does it avoid stereotypes? –Does the author distinguish between theory & fact –Balanced, presenting both sides
Reliability Questions to Ask • “Time & Place Rule” (Primary) – How close in time & place to the event? • Currency (Secondary Sources) – How old is this source? Has anything happened since it was written that would affect its reliability?
Reliability Questions to Ask • Author – Qualified? Trustworthy? Bias? • The Information / Writing – Accurate, avoid stereotypes, balanced • Currency or “Time & Place Rule”
Basic Bibliography Book source: L Last name, First name. Title of Book. City of Publication: Publisher, Year of Publication. Medium of Publication. Reference (Encyclopedia or Dictionary): Last name, First name. "Title of Essay. " Title of Reference Book. Ed. Year. Medium of Publication.
Basic Bibliography Online source: Editor, author, or compiler name (if available). Name of Site. Version number. Name of institution/organization affiliated with the site (sponsor or publisher), date of resource creation (if available). Medium of publication. Date of access.
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