How should students analyse sources?

Firstly, students should identity whether the source is primary or secondary. Primary sources are those that are directly produced from events such as an eyewitness account. Secondary sources are those produced from primary sources such as a newspaper article produced from an eyewitness account.

The type of source should then be used to determine its validity in accessing a historical question or creating a narrative, for example. For students at GCSE level this will involve accessing the usefulness of the source.

The validity and type of source are often determined by its provenance. Students should ask whether the reasons the source was created and where the source is from affect its usefulness and reliability to provide an accurate historical insight. For example, a propaganda piece is less useful than an eyewitness account. However, both reveal certain historical features that are useful and both are biased and thus limited in some way.

Finally, students should access when the source was created to determine its usefulness in studying a particular period of history. For example, a government record from the reign of James I & VI of England and Scotland is more useful for studying the Stuart dynasty than a Roman eyewitness account of the siege of Rome in 410 A.D.

AH
Answered by Alexander H. History tutor

3250 Views

See similar History GCSE tutors

Related History GCSE answers

All answers ▸

Explain one way in which smuggling in Britain during the 18th and 19th C was similar to smuggling in the 20th C.


Explain two consequences of the Fall of the Berlin Wall.


Give two things you can infer from Source A about Hitler’s leadership of the Nazi Party in the 1920s.


D-day or the invasion of Normandy is one of the turning points of World War II. To what extent do you agree with this statement? Why?


We're here to help

contact us iconContact ustelephone icon+44 (0) 203 773 6020
Facebook logoInstagram logoLinkedIn logo

MyTutor is part of the IXL family of brands:

© 2026 by IXL Learning