Primary and Secondary Sources
Primary Sources
Primary sources are made or given to you when the information is created, for example,
if you are doing a survey dogs vs cats and you ask people, dogs or cats, and they say to
you, dog, then that information is a primary source and has not had any chance to be
be corrupted.
Secondary Sources
Secondary sources are pieces for information that have been conveyed to you by someone
else, for example, if you have people doing surveys for you, and someone is doing chips vs nuggets, but they are bias towards chips, then they could easily make it seem that they are
the most popular by far. This leads to bias data and distorted graphs.
Primary sources are made or given to you when the information is created, for example,
if you are doing a survey dogs vs cats and you ask people, dogs or cats, and they say to
you, dog, then that information is a primary source and has not had any chance to be
be corrupted.
Secondary Sources
Secondary sources are pieces for information that have been conveyed to you by someone
else, for example, if you have people doing surveys for you, and someone is doing chips vs nuggets, but they are bias towards chips, then they could easily make it seem that they are
the most popular by far. This leads to bias data and distorted graphs.