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Primary and Secondary Sources. History Detectives. What do we use to learn about history? We use PRIMARY and SECONDARY SOURCES. . Primary Source – Any original m aterial from the period or event under consideration Firsthand information or records of original ideas
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Primary and Secondary Sources History Detectives
What do we use to learn about history? We use PRIMARY and SECONDARY SOURCES.
Primary Source – Any original materialfrom 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
Which one is more important? Primary ? Secondary ?
A painting of a pioneer family traveling over the Rocky Mountains
Soldier’s boots worn during the Civil War… Displayed in a museum exhibit.
A love letter from your Great Grandfather to your Great Grandmother
A magazine article reviewing the book “Origami Diary of a Wimpy Wizard’s Unfortunate Events.”
Primary SourcesSecondary Sources • Textbooks • Biographies • Lectures • General histories • Most journal articles • Most published books • Webpages • 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
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:Authorshipmatters! 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 truthfulbut 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:
Tuesday, August 13 Warm-Up In your own words, describe the difference between a primary and secondary source.