Spy Letters of the American Revolution
Teachers' Lounge Interpreting Primary Sources

Interpreting Primary Sources

What is a Primary Source? A primary source is a piece of living history.  It may be defined as any artifact that provides first hand or direct information about the past.  Primary sources may include first person accounts (e.g. oral histories, diaries, memoirs, correspondence), documents (e.g. correspondence, treaties, laws, speeches), images (e.g. maps, photographs, drawings, paintings), or historically gathered data.

How do you begin to interpret a primary source?
Begin analyzing a primary source, such as a spy letter, by answering the following questions:

For analyzing images, the following questions are also a starting point:


What is the value of using primary sources in the classroom? Children are rarely encouraged to use primary sources in their original form because some archivists and teachers question their ability to work effectively with primary sources or they consider children a physical threat to the collections. The opportunity to responsibly exploit the power of digital technology to deliver primary sources over the Internet should greatly expand the use of primary sources by K-12 students and teachers.

The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) believes primary sources should be used to expose students to important historical concepts. Students already recognize that textbooks enable the study of key patterns, events, and people in human history. Primary sources teach students that records reflect the personal, social, political, or economic points of view of records creators, and historians (or students) apply their own biases to interpretation of the records. Students learn, therefore, that history reflects an author's interpretation of past events.

Students' experiences with primary sources also encourage analysis and evaluation of contemporary sources, including news stories, statistics, and advertising. As students learn to recognize the subjective nature of evidence and gain an ability to identify limitations within a given source, they develop skills to make appropriate use of many sources of information.

Enhancing curriculum using authentic artifacts, documents, photographs, and manuscripts in project-oriented activities animates the classroom and links students with history's diverse cast of characters. Students and teachers should use personal, local, national, and/or international records to consider documentation, evidence, and society.

What can teachers, librarians, and archivists do? Anne Gilliland-Swetland, assistant professor in UCLA's Department of Library and Information Science, suggests that addressing the educational needs of K-12 communities provides an opportunity to:

a) expand the relevance of archival repositories within society;
b) begin to grow a "records literate" as well as an "information literate" audience that is aware of the importance, relevance, and complexities of records as bureaucratic, social, political, and cultural evidence;
c) promote the role of archivists as active participants in the communication of cultural heritage;
d) take advantage of the technological and financial resources that are being allocated nationally for the application of information technology in the classroom and for educational reform; and
e) promote archival education as a college choice.

Teachers, students, and archivists should work together to effectively integrate primary sources into K-12 educational activities.

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