Encyclopedias
Provide an overview of a topic or basic information. Sometimes bibliographies of recommended sources on a topic are listed in an encyclopedia article. There are many subject specific encyclopedias as well as general ones. Encyclopedias are a good place to look for background information or a place to begin when working with a topic that is unfamiliar.
Explore online encyclopedias at Oxford Reference Online.
Newspapers
Report news events daily--nationally, regionally and locally. Newspaper articles are primary sources since reporters interview eye-witnesses and persons who are directly involved in an event.
Many newspapers are available online. Some like The New York Times or The Washington Post have limited availability, while others are freely available.
You can search for newpaper articles in Access World News or Newspaper Source Plus. Historic Newspapers can be searched using Early American Newspaper, 1829-1922 and African American Newspapers, 1827-1997
Popular Magazines
News events and interest stories for the general public. They have lots of advertising and tend to be highly illustrated. Several databases index both popular and scholarly resources. Readers' Guide Retrospective: 1890-1982 (H.W. Wilson) provides access to historic resources in popular magazines.
Scholarly Journals
Publish articles written by scholars to report their research findings. These journal articles are written with other scholars in mind as the research done in scholarly journals is very specific and sometimes very technical. There are many databases that index scholarly journals. Some databases are subject specific, like ATLA Religion Database for topics on Religion and Theology or CINAHL for topics on Nursing. Others like Academic Search Complete are cross-disciplinary and cover lots of topics.
Primary Sources - first hand or contemporary accounts of an event written by someone who experienced or witnessed the event. These are often unpublished documents and can include diaries, letters, speeches, interviews, etc. They can include reports on events if they are close to the event and not historical accounts.
Secondary Sources - interpret primary sources. They are often published works including books and journal articles but could include radio and film documentaries. Secondary sources interpret, critique, analyze and assign value to the events in primary sources.
Scholars
Examples:
Primary Source - City of God by Augustine
Secondary Source - Levering, M. (2011). Linear and participatory history: Augustine's City of God. Journal Of Theological Interpretation, 5(2), 175-196.
Primary Source - Lincoln's Gettysburg address
Secondary Source - Schwartz, Barry. 1996. "Rereading the Gettysburg Address: Social Change and Collective Memory." Qualitative Sociology 19, no. 3: 395.