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1.1.2: Types of Resources

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    261428
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    There are 3 main categories of information resources: primary, secondary, and tertiary sources.

    1. Primary Primary sources relate first-hand information. They include original works of art or literature, research data or results, historical documents, newspaper articles, and more.
    2. Secondary Secondary sources are works that are created using information from primary sources. These sources may communicate and support an author’s thesis or give an account of a topic based on earlier works and/or primary sources. Many non-fiction books and journal articles are secondary sources. When you write a research essay for a class, you are creating a secondary source.
    3. Tertiary Tertiary sources give a brief overview, background, or summary of a topic. Handbooks, encyclopedias, and dictionaries are good examples of tertiary sources.

    The chart below identifies a few of the most common types of resources that you encounter in your daily life or in school. You'll notice that the descriptions of each of the resource types listed are broken down according to concepts laid out by the American Library Association (see above). The places each type of resource can be found and real-life examples of each are listed as well.

    An infographic listing some resource types: scholarly, trade/professional, general interest, popular, reference, government documents.
    Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\): Some resource types, characteristics, and examples (Scholarly, Trade/Professional, General Interest, Popular, Reference, Gov Docs). (Copyright Sara Klein)

    This page titled 1.1.2: Types of Resources is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Sarah Klein.

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