ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos


Humanities Videos 55 videos

What is Shmoop Mythology?
2224 Views

The gods and heroes battle it out with monsters in the best of mythology.

Echo and Narcissus
4243 Views

Today we aren't looking for the most virtuous person, or most likeable, but rather the most disturbing. Will it be Echo, the nymph who is doomed to...

Icarus
5397 Views

Don't fly too close to the sun, Shmoopers.

See All

Web Literacy: Sources 345 Views


Share It!



Transcript

00:01

We speak student!

00:06

Checking Sources on the Web

00:09

[ dog barks ]

00:10

What's the difference between a primary and a secondary source?

00:15

Let's use three examples.

00:16

A primary source -- If you're studying, say,

00:19

Renaissance art.

00:21

A primary source is a work of Renaissance art.

00:24

It is Michelangelo painted something or sculpted something.

00:29

That is the primary source.

00:30

The secondary source is something that is written

00:33

about the primary source.

00:35

And it goes with texts, too.

00:37

A primary source might be a document from the government.

00:41

It might be John Hancock's signature.

00:44

A secondary source is something that is about that primary source.

00:47

"John Hancock was actually not the first person to sign it.

00:51

He just had the biggest signature."

00:53

Whatever that is. That's a secondary source.

00:55

Primary sources are the best to cite

00:58

because there's no -- It just is.

01:01

John Hancock's signature is big.

01:03

You're looking at it right there and you're saying,

01:06

"Hey, check it out. I'm looking at this."

01:07

It's basically as objective as you can get

01:10

because this is what exists.

01:11

But then the secondary source is gonna interpret that

01:13

and kind of give you more information about it or whatever.

01:16

And that can be trustworthy,

01:17

but you just have to make sure that there's no bias in it.

01:19

So you're looking at the primary source which is

01:21

what was created at the time at the scene.

01:24

And the secondary source is describing it.

01:25

And there's quality hierarchies

01:27

about secondary sources, meaning

01:29

if it was written contemporaneously with Michelangelo

01:32

and it was his uncle

01:34

who hung out with him and cleaned his shop

01:36

and he wrote about Michelangelo's work habits,

01:38

that's gonna carry a lot more weight than

01:39

a PHD writing about that 300 years later

01:43

when they have all kinds of gauze in front of them.

01:46

Exactly. And it's just kind of like a game of telephone, right?

01:47

Because that PHD student probably read

01:50

the things that the uncle said

01:52

about the piece of art.

01:53

That were repatriated by priests

01:55

who wrote it on lambskin

01:56

and then in 100 years, it burned down,

01:57

and someone else did that and they omitted every third word

02:00

to save space and so on.

02:01

So on the Internet, most of what you're reading is secondary sources.

02:04

We should say that.

02:05

But you can find primary sources on the Internet.

02:08

And, for example, if you're writing

02:10

an essay about how blogging has changed the way we write,

02:16

a blog is then a primary source

02:19

because that's the topic.

02:21

I might take so-and-so's blog about baking.

02:25

That's a primary source.

02:26

One of her blog entries. Or his.

02:28

[ laughs ]

02:29

But if I then read an article

02:31

called "Blogging in the 21st Century,"

02:34

that's a secondary source.

02:36

So primary sources don't have to be

02:37

from the Renaissance. They don't have to be from

02:39

early America. They can be contemporary primary sources.

02:43

But it depends on what your topic is.

02:45

If your topic is baking,

02:47

then the blog actually becomes a secondary source.

02:49

Because baking --

02:51

This isn't the blog entry about baking.

02:54

So depending on what your topic is,

02:56

different things become primary and secondary sources.

03:00

[ pen writing ]

03:02

What is credibility?

03:04

What are the four categories we deploy in determining credibility?

03:09

Why is it so important to understand objectivity?

03:13

Can Wikipedia be credible?

03:16

How can you check?

03:22

All right, next.

Related Videos

Careers: Real Estate Broker (Residential)
278 Views

What's the difference between a real estate agent and a real estate broker? Is the latter just, uh... out of cash? Quite the opposite, in fact. Jum...

TSA Agent
259 Views

So... what's a TSA worker, and what do they do? Oh, we thought maybe you knew. Okay, okay... so TSA (or Transportation Security Administration) wor...