About Primary Source Documents
Primary source documents are original materials, such as an original study or research project. They are from the event or time period involved and provide an account of "how it was" without analysis, commentary, editing, or interpretation.
A primary source should include the following:
- Individuals or organizations that conducted the research
- background, hypothesis, or what was studied
- purpose
- method
- results
Searching for Primary Source Documents
To find primary sources in databases and on the Web search your topic(s) and other relevant terms.
Examples:
your topic AND (research OR study) AND university
your topic AND "focus of the study"
your topic AND "purpose of this study"
your concept 1 AND your concept 2 AND (study OR report)
Ivermectin AND resistance AND horses AND (study OR report)
Secondary Sources
Secondary Sources-- articles, web pages, interviews, statistical data, etc.-- are accounts written after the fact and interpret primary sources. A secondary source may be a discussion of or commentary on primary source events with hindsight. They may explain, report, review, or evaluate primary source events.
TIPS:
— Be alert as you begin your research. Primary sources such as studies and reports, are often referred to in journal articles, on association Web pages, in fact sheets, and more.
— As you review resources such as articles, documents, and web pages, look for references to "studies," "research," etc. Then use the available information to find the primary source.
— You may need to search for the primary source using the researcher name(s), the name of the study, the place where the study or research was conducted, and/or some of the statistical outcome data. If a place of publication is identified, try to find that.
— If the research/study/report was published in a journal, search the A-to-Z Journals list for the journal title. Once you locate the journal, search for the research article.