Primary Source Analysis
Learn
When we study economics and history, we use different types of sources to learn about the past and understand how economic systems worked. In this lesson, you'll learn how to tell the difference between primary sources and secondary sources, and how to analyze them to draw conclusions about economics.
Primary Sources
Original materials created during the time period being studied. These are firsthand accounts from people who were actually there!
Secondary Sources
Materials created after the time period, usually by someone who researched primary sources. These analyze and interpret events.
Why Does This Matter for Economics?
Primary sources help us understand what people actually experienced during different economic times. A diary from the Great Depression tells us how real families dealt with money problems. A newspaper ad from 1950 shows us what things cost. These sources bring economics to life!
Examples of Economic Primary Sources
Newspaper Articles
News stories written at the time events happened
PrimaryDiaries & Letters
Personal writings from people who lived through events
PrimaryGovernment Records
Official documents, laws, and statistics
PrimaryPhotographs
Pictures taken during the time period
PrimaryAdvertisements
Ads showing products and prices from the era
PrimarySpeeches
Recorded or written speeches from leaders
PrimaryExamples of Economic Secondary Sources
Textbooks
Books written to explain historical events
SecondaryDocumentaries
Films made later about past events
SecondaryModern Analysis
Articles written today about past economics
SecondaryEncyclopedia Entries
Reference articles summarizing events
SecondaryHow to Analyze a Primary Source
Observe
What do you notice? Read the text carefully or study the image. Write down everything you see.
Source
Who created this? When? Where? Why might they have created it? What was their point of view?
Contextualize
What was happening at this time in history? How does this source fit into the bigger picture?
Corroborate
What do other sources say? Does this match or conflict with other evidence?
Conclude
What can you learn from this source? What questions does it raise?
Let's Practice with a Real Economic Source
GRAND OPENING SALE!
Visit our new supermarket!
Milk - 25 cents per quart
Bread - 18 cents per loaf
Ground beef - 39 cents per pound
Gasoline - 23 cents per gallon
"Shop where your dollar goes further!"
What Can We Learn From This Source?
- Prices were different: Things cost much less in 1955 (but people also earned less money!)
- Supermarkets were new: The "Grand Opening" suggests supermarkets were still a new concept
- Inflation over time: Comparing these prices to today shows how money's value changes
- Marketing language: "Your dollar goes further" - people cared about value then too!
Examples
Let's analyze more economic primary sources together.
Economic Analysis Questions
- Supply and Demand: Why couldn't Maria ask for higher pay? (High supply of workers, she was easy to replace)
- Working Conditions: What does this tell us about labor before modern laws?
- Family Economics: Why did children work? Families needed the income to survive.
- Point of View: This is one worker's experience - what might factory owners have said?
DO WITH LESS
SO THEY'LL HAVE ENOUGH!
Rationing gives you your fair share.
Sugar - Coffee - Meat - Butter
Use your ration book wisely!
Economic Concepts in Action
- Scarcity: During war, resources were scarce because they were needed for soldiers
- Rationing: Government limited how much people could buy to ensure fair distribution
- Propaganda: The government used posters to convince people to accept limits
- Patriotic Appeal: Connecting sacrifice to supporting troops (emotional, not just economic)
Practice
Test your understanding of primary source analysis with these questions.
Check Your Understanding
Primary Sources
Original materials from the time period: diaries, letters, photos, newspapers, ads, speeches, records.
Secondary Sources
Materials created later that analyze primary sources: textbooks, documentaries, encyclopedias.
Point of View
Every source has a perspective. Consider who created it and why.
Corroboration
Check multiple sources to verify information and understand different perspectives.
Context Matters
Understand what was happening when the source was created.
Ask Questions
Who? What? When? Where? Why? What can we learn?
Key Takeaways
- Primary sources are original materials from the time period being studied
- Secondary sources analyze and interpret primary sources
- Good analysis considers who created the source and their perspective
- Context helps us understand what the source means
- Corroboration means checking multiple sources
- Primary sources show us how real people experienced economic events
Next Steps
- Look for primary sources in your own life (old family photos, letters, documents)
- Ask older family members about prices when they were young
- Compare prices from old newspaper ads to today's prices
- Think about how your own writings could be primary sources for future historians!