Instruction Liaison
Examples of Secondary Sources
Examples of Primary Sources | Examples of Secondary Sources |
---|---|
Original research articles published in scholarly, peer-reviewed journals |
Scholarly articles which critique original research articles |
Interviews | Review articles from scholarly journals |
Correspondence, including Letters |
Book or movie reviews |
Diaries | Dictionaries (can also be a tertiary source) |
Court Cases | Directories (can also be a tertiary source) |
Government Documents | Encyclopedias (can also be a tertiary source) |
Laws and Legislation | Handbooks (can also be a tertiary source) |
Speeches | Textbooks (can also be a tertiary source) |
Photographs |
Secondary Sources
Secondary data lets you build on existing research.
Secondary Sources include books, magazines, journals and newspapers which contain articles discussing various laws, regulations and various related issues. Why use them? Secondary Sources often:
- Are the best place to start your research
- Provide terminology
- Are easier to find
- Give a feel or overview of the event or issue, and often supply dates, names and other background information, such as the names and citations of statutes and court cases
- May refer to related subjects or issues
- Are more readable than many primary sources
- Digest or synthesize the information found in primary sources
Find Secondary Sources using the following suggested databases: (others may also work, too )
- National Newspapers Premier or Newspaper Source Plus
- Communication and Mass Media Complete
- Academic Search Complete
- ABI/Inform Global
- Penfield Library Catalog or Worldwide Catalog (to locate books, reference books)
Communication and Mass Media Complete, Academic Search Complete and ABI/Inform Global are examples of journal databases, and will provide access to both popular press and scholarly journal articles. To view only scholarly articles in these databases, be sure to select the “Scholarly/Peer Reviewed Journals” limiter on the search page.