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The Truth is Out
There ... But Where?
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In libraries and on the Internet you can find books, magazines,
encyclopedias, lab reports, historical documents, audio and video
recordings, and all sorts of other information sources, all of which
are useful for different purposes. Deciding which will suit your
purpose is an important early step in the research process.
Three basic types of resources - To know where to go for
information, it is useful to know how information is produced; here
is a very general overview. (note that these are not rigid
distinctions; the same resource can overlap categories.)
- Primary - Direct, uninterpreted records of the
subject of your research project. As such, a primary
source can be almost anything, depending on the subject
and purpose of your research.
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- Secondary - Books, articles, and other
writings by scholars and researchers build on primary
sources by interpreting and assessing primary
information.
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- Tertiary - Encyclopedias, indexes, textbooks,
and other reference sources which present summaries of or
introductions to the current state of research on a
topic, or provide a list of primary and secondary sources
of more extensive information.
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Work backwards. Usually, your research should begin with
tertiary sources:
- Tertiary - Start by finding background information on
your topic by consulting reference sources for introductions and
summaries, and to find bibliographies or citations of secondary
and primary sources.
- Secondary - Find books, articles, and other sources
providing more extensive and thorough analyses of a topic. Check
to see what other scholars have to say about your topic.
- Primary - Now that you have a solid background
knowledge of your topic, you are better able to understand,
interpret, and analyze the primary source information. See if you
can find primary source evidence to support or refute what other
scholars have said about your topic, or posit an interpretation of
your own and look for more primary sources to confirm or refute
your thesis. When you present your conclusions, you will have
produced another secondary source to aid others in their
research.
Here's a brief list of some of the sources you can find in each of
these categories; remember, there are many more:
Primary
- Conference proceedings - Scholars and researchers
getting together and presenting their latest ideas and
findings
- Books - Extensive and detailed discussions of a
particular topic or set of topics, written by the scholars and
researchers who came up with the ideas or discovered the
findings.
- Journal articles - Brief, specific analyses of
particular aspects of a topic, written by the scholars and
researchers who came up with the ideas or discovered the
findings.
- Lab reports - Experiments, observations, etc.
- Historical documents - Official papers, maps, treaties,
etc.
- First-person accounts - Diaries, memoirs, letters,
interviews, speeches
- Recordings - audio, video, photographic
- Artifacts - manufactured items such as clothing,
furniture, tools, buildings
- Newspapers - Some types of articles, e.g. stories on a
breaking issue, or journalists reporting the results of their
investigations.
- Government publications - Census statistics, economic
data, court reports, etc.
- Internet - Web sites that publish the author's findings
or research; e.g. your professor's home page listing research
results. Note: use extreme caution when using the Internet as a
primary source
remember, on the Internet a page citing
authoritative findings could have been published by any goofball
off the street.
- Manuscript collections - Collected writings, notes,
letters, diaries, and other unpublished works.
- Archives - Records (minutes of meetings, purchase
invoices, financial statements, etc.) of an organization (e.g. The
Nature Conservancy), institution (e.g. Wesleyan University),
business, or other group entity (even the Grateful Dead has an
archivist on staff).
Secondary
- Books - Extensive and detailed analyses by scholars
providing criticisms, commentaries, and interpretations of primary
ideas and findings.
- Journal articles - Brief, specific analyses,
criticisms, commentaries, and interpretations of particular
aspects of primary ideas and findings.
- Newspapers - Articles which report on earlier findings,
or offer commentary or opinions.
- Internet - Web sites that comment on earlier findings
or research; see cautionary note above!
Tertiary
- Encyclopedias - Articles providing introductory or
summary information; coverage can be general (e.g. Encyclopedia
Britannica) or subject-specific (e.g. Encyclopedia of
Sociology).
- Dictionaries - Definitions or brief summaries of terms,
ideas, etc.; coverage can be general (e.g. Webster's, Random
House) or subject-specific (e.g. Dictionary of Cell Biology).
- Almanacs - Good for concise factual information, e.g.
statistics, lists
- Directories - Lists of people or organizations, with
addresses, affiliations, etc.; useful guides to finding primary
source material
- Atlases - Maps of population, economic, historical,
political, geological, biological, climatological, etc.
information.
- Indexes - Lists of sources on a subject or set of
subjects; once you have some key terms for your topic, use indexes
to find secondary and primary sources.
 
What's Out
There - Topic
- Background
Info - Searching
- Books
- Call
Numbers
Journals
- Multimedia
- Primary
- If It Isn't
Here - Internet
- Evaluating
- Citing
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