Reference Sources are an excellent place to start your research because they:
Examples of Reference Sources:
Reference:
Memorial University Librarires. (2013). What are Reference Sources? Retrieved from http://www.library.mun.ca/guides/howto/reference.php
Primary Sources | Secondary Sources |
A Primary Source is a document, record, or work created at the time of an event or by a person who directly experienced an event. A Primary Source contains original data and is from the time period being researched; it has not yet been filtered through interpretation. Examples:
References: University of Maryland Libaries. (2013). Primary, Secondary and Tertiary Sources. Retrieved from http://www.lib.umd.edu/ues/guides/primary-sources#primary University of Victoria Libraries. (2013). Primary or Secondary Sources. Retrieved from http://www.uvic.ca/library/research/tips/primvsec/index.php |
A Secondary Source is an account written after the fact with the benefit of hindsight. A Secondary Source usually describes, interprets, summarizes, analyzes, evaluates, is derived from, or is based on Primary Source materials. Examples:
References: University of Maryland Libaries. (2013). Primary, Secondary and Tertiary Sources. Retrieved from http://www.lib.umd.edu/ues/guides/primary-sources#primary University of Victoria Libraries. (2013). Primary or Secondary Sources. Retrieved from http://www.uvic.ca/library/research/tips/primvsec/index.php |
*The above references are in APA format.