Getting background information and general facts about your topic is a good way to start your research. This not only helps you better understand your topic, but it also helps you formulate the boundaries of your research and key terms for your thesis statement. It can be a helpful guide to begin to narrow down your topic into a coherent and specific area.
Tertiary sources consist of information which is a distillation and collection of primary and secondary sources.
Examples include:
Librarian-curated collection of award-winning reference works with extensive subject coverage.
An American Mosaic Online Resource. Developed with the guidance of African American librarians and subject specialists, The African American Experience is both a broad and deep online database collection on African American history and culture. Providing thesis-driven, peer-reviewed scholarly essays, as well as primary source documents and classroom resources, it is a collection that taps a tremendous variety of sources essential to understanding African American history and its relation to greater U.S. history.
Comprehensive, informative database dedicated to the history and culture of Latinos.
latino history, hispanic history, latin american & caribbean studies