"

Types of Sources

people in library

Whether you do academic or work-related research such as strategic planning, it’s important to look for the right type of source that will yield the information you need.

You can consider sources by the type of information they provide or by the type of publication in which the source resides. Know that there’s overlap—these are not discrete categories.

It’s useful to consider types of sources in different ways to help you consciously choose sources that will yield the best evidence for your thesis, purpose, and audience.

Sources by Type of Information

There are three basic types of information, primary, secondary, and tertiary, although tertiary sources are sometimes grouped with secondary. Primary sources are original works, secondary sources are analyses of those original works, and tertiary sources are collections of secondary source information. Academic, scientific, and business professionals use all three types of sources, as appropriate. You’ll determine appropriateness by understanding the type of support your thesis, purpose, and audience require, as well as understanding the different types of support themselves.

  • Primary sources are original works such as original historical documents, art works, interviews, diaries, photographs, speeches, letters, research/experiment results, autobiographies, and more.  Think of primary sources as first-hand accounts by people who experienced the event. As such, primary sources may reflect the context of their times.
  • Secondary sources contain others’ insights into and analyses of primary sources, such as a scholarly article analyzing a historical event or a work of art, a biography of a famous person, a political commentary, and more. Think of secondary sources as one step removed from primary sources. As such they analyze, review,  interpret, and/or evaluate information, often from the perspective of a different context or time period.
  • Tertiary sources such as encyclopedias, Wikipedia, dictionaries and more provide overviews of topics by synthesizing information gathered from both primary and secondary sources.  Tertiary sources often provide data in a convenient form or provide the context with which to interpret information.
Types of Sources in Various Disciplines
Subject Primary Secondary Tertiary
Art Painting Critical review of the painting Encyclopedia article on the artist
History Civil War diary Book on a Civil War battle List of battle sites
Literature Novel or poem Essay about themes in the work Biography of the author
Political science Geneva Convention Article about prisoners of war Chronology of treaties
Agriculture Conference paper on tobacco genetics Review article on the current state of tobacco research Encyclopedia article on tobacco
Chemistry Chemical patent Book on chemical reactions Table of related reactions
Physics Einstein’s diary Biography on Einstein Dictionary of relativity

Note that sometimes tertiary sources are classified along with secondary sources.

The following video provides a clear overview of primary and secondary sources.

video What are Primary and Secondary Sources? Provided by: University of Houston Libraries. Located at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X3JrQ6sHZ8c. LicenseOtherLicense Terms: YouTube video.

Sources by Publication Type

Another way to categorize sources is by the type of publication which houses the information.

Overview Sources

Encyclopedias, Wikipedia articles, and general Google searches are good places to begin your research to get an overview of your topic and the big questions associated with that topic. You usually don’t use these as your main sources for an academic essay simply because they are too general. Instead, use overview sources to develop context for your topic, to learn the background of the topic, major ideas and subtopics, and important researchers in the field. Disclaimer: Be careful when doing general Google searches, since they may pull information from websites that are slanted or that are not created by people knowledgeable in a field.

Reports, articles, and books from credible non-academic sources

General interest magazines (TimeNewsweek online) or online general news sites (CNN, MSNBC) can be used as overview materials, but also may provide more in-depth coverage of a topic for the general pubic. For example, an article on the melting of the polar icecaps in Time magazine may offer an overview of the issue, while an article on polar icecaps in Scientific American or The Ecologist, while still written for a general reading audience, may go into more depth. “Credible” is the important characteristic here.

Sources written for a general reading audience can be used if they offer well-researched and objectively-presented information about an issue, person, or event. Credible non-academic sources may offer more up-to-date information on events or trends not yet analyzed in academic literature, as well as point you to more specialized sources. You usually can find credible, non-academic sources if you do Google Scholar searches or look at other valid sources such as government websites. For example, if you’re researching an issue related to polar icecaps, you might look at the website for the National Resources Defense Council/NRDC or reports found at the website for the National Snow and Ice Data Center/NSIDC. You can also look in article databases to find credible, non-academic sources.

Scholarly Sources

Scholarly or specialized sources are written for readers with some background in the particular topic. For example, someone with a background in science should be able to easily read and understand the articles published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences or the Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences.

However, even if you are not a specialist in the field, your initial reading of overview material and information from credible sources written for the general public should enable you to use some specialized material.

Scholarly articles are the result of rigorous research and analysis. They usually provide strong, researched, logical evidence for claims. Scholars write articles about what they’ve done in their research, what they’ve found, and why they think it’s important, to join the academic conversation around a specific topic. To be published, scholarly articles and books have to be peer-reviewed, which means that other known scholars in the field have to evaluate and recommend those articles for publication. You usually can find scholarly articles from databases that draw from academic publications.

To determine if a source is scholarly, look for the following characteristics:

  • Structure: The full text article often begins with an abstract or summary containing the main points of the article. It may also be broken down into sections such as “Methods,” “Results,” and “Discussion.”
  • Authors: Authors’ names are listed with credentials/degrees and places of employment, which are often universities or research institutions. The authors are experts in the field.
  • Audience: The article uses advanced vocabulary or specialized language intended for other scholars in the field, not necessarily for the average reader.
  • Length: Scholarly articles are often, but not always, longer than the popular articles found in general interest magazines such as Time, Newsweek, National Geographic, etc. Articles are longer because it takes more content to explore topics in depth.
  • Bibliography or Reference List: Scholarly articles include parenthetical in-text citations referring to items in a bibliography or reference list. A list of sources at the end is important so others can find the original source of an idea or quotation.

The following video reviews different types of publications and the type information which tends to be in each.  It also explains situations in which you might research information in certain types of publications.

video Understanding & Identifying Source Types. Provided by: Pace University Library. Located at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6FkpXRWm5R4. LicenseOtherLicense Terms: YouTube video.

How to Determine What Type of Source to Research

library with books on shelves and computer screens

Analyze your topic/working thesis to determine the types of sources that can help support that thesis.

For example, if your topic deals with Van Gogh’s use of pale green paint and what it connotes in his later paintings, you will need to blend evidence from primary sources (images of the paintings themselves) with secondary sources (other scholars’ views, discussions, and logical arguments about the same topic).

If your working thesis deals with the benefits of regular exercise for older adults in their 70s-90s, you may blend evidence from primary sources (data from research studies, interviews with older adults or experts in the field) with secondary sources (interpretations of research studies). In some cases, you may find that your research is mostly from secondary sources and that’s fine, depending on your topic and working thesis. Just make sure to consider, consciously, the types of sources that can best be used to support your own ideas.  And, make sure that the sources you use are mostly scholarly sources.

 

video What is Scholarly Research?. Authored by: Vanessa Slagle. Located athttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qUd_gf2ypk4Project: Modern Librarian Memoirs. LicenseOtherLicense Terms: YouTube video

The Community College of New York (CCNY) Libraries has a useful Research Toolkit: Types of Sources that suggests types of sources for you to research depending on the type of information you need.

Content Attributions

Media Attributions

License

Icon for the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

College Reading and Writing Copyright © by Lumen Learning is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.