Answer:
<u>Secondary Source</u> 1. A classroom history textbook
<u>Primary Source</u> 2. A copy of the text of the Phil. Constitution
<u>Secondary Source</u> 3. A biography of Carlos P. Romulo
<u>Primary Source</u> 4. A video of Martin Luther King Jr.’s I Have a Dream speech
<u>Primary Source</u> 5. An interview with a survivor of a natural disaster
<u>Secondary Source</u> 6. An opinion of the editor from the newspaper
<u>Secondary Source</u> 7. A Wikipedia article about George Washington
<u>Primary Source</u> 8. Ann Frank’s autobiography The Diary of a Young Girl
<u>Primary Source</u> 9. A map of Africa from 1900
<u>Secondary Source</u> 10. A story on a televised national news program about a bill passed by Congress
Explanation:
The above selected answers are correct.
A primary source is known to be anything that actually gives a direct evidence about events, people, situations, experiments, etc. that one is researching on. Such sources include the documents or artifacts that was made by the participant in the event or an eye-witness. Primary sources may include interviews, diaries, government documents, photographs, letters, oral histories, poems, novels, plays, and music.
A secondary source is known to be anything which actually interprets, analyzes, evaluates, or describes the information which is gotten from primary sources. Some examples of secondary sources are books, documentaries, articles, textbooks, reviews, essays, encyclopedia, etc.