First and secondhand accounts | Reading | Khan Academy - By
00:0-1 | Hello , readers . I just got back from the | |
00:01 | library with these books . Oh , big surprise , | |
00:04 | you say . I went to the library . I | |
00:06 | found two books . No , I get it . | |
00:07 | But these books will help us talk about the difference | |
00:09 | between a 1st and 2nd hand account . You see | |
00:13 | , this is a travel diary written by a young | |
00:15 | man on the Oregon Trail , like 150 years ago | |
00:18 | . Whereas this is a book about the Oregon Trail | |
00:21 | written last year , a firsthand account is created by | |
00:25 | the person who experienced an event . First . Hand | |
00:29 | accounts are also called primary sources . Primary is another | |
00:31 | way to say first or original , it uses pronounced | |
00:35 | like I or me . It's told from one person's | |
00:38 | perspective . A secondhand account is more distant from the | |
00:42 | event , like a book or a newspaper article . | |
00:44 | The author wasn't there , but they use first hand | |
00:47 | accounts like interviews , diaries , photos or video recordings | |
00:51 | to stitch the story together . The story uses pronounced | |
00:54 | like they she or he not I or we let | |
00:58 | me show you more specifically by comparing thes two passages | |
01:02 | . Okay , so this one our first hand account | |
01:05 | comes from the Diary of Horace Griggs , our young | |
01:08 | migrant on the Oregon Trail , July 18th , 18 | |
01:12 | 71 . We're in the Wyoming territory now , and | |
01:15 | it's been a few days since we had good water | |
01:18 | . I'm starting to worry . It's been a least | |
01:20 | a week since any of us saw a tree , | |
01:22 | but the buffalo chips remained plentiful . At least the | |
01:25 | darn things burn hot . And here's an excerpt from | |
01:29 | a secondary source . Our book about the Oregon Trail | |
01:32 | that came out last year . The Oregon trail didn't | |
01:35 | have many trees . The pioneers used buffalo chips , | |
01:38 | dried buffalo dung as fuel for their fires . In | |
01:41 | fact , some Children played games with buffalo chips . | |
01:44 | They tossed them around like Frisbees . So we've got | |
01:47 | here two passages , both about buffalo droppings . Good | |
01:50 | job me . Let me be clear . It's not | |
01:51 | gross . They're mostly made of dried grass . Honestly | |
01:55 | , what are the big differences between these two passages | |
01:59 | ? Look at how Horace uses first person pronouns like | |
02:02 | I or we or us . He's telling the story | |
02:06 | from his perspective and the perspective of other people traveling | |
02:09 | with him . It's like he's telling us a story | |
02:11 | , and it's his story to tell . He was | |
02:12 | right . They're starting fires with buffalo chips . We | |
02:15 | can see how he felt about not having access toe | |
02:18 | water . He was worried . Firsthand accounts connect us | |
02:21 | more closely with the emotions of the writer , and | |
02:25 | because he was there , he could accurately describe his | |
02:28 | experiences . However , this guy can only describe his | |
02:30 | own experience . He doesn't know what it was like | |
02:33 | in other wagon trains . He doesn't know what it | |
02:35 | was like to be a native community encountering these settlers | |
02:38 | . He's running from one perspective , and it's his | |
02:40 | perspective . Now look at the second passage . It | |
02:43 | uses the pronounced there and they to refer to the | |
02:46 | pioneers and their kids . What does that tell us | |
02:49 | ? The writer is not part of the group , | |
02:51 | wasn't there . Doesn't consider themselves part of the US | |
02:54 | The way that Horace considers himself part of an US | |
02:57 | the author is mawr distant . It's not the authors | |
03:00 | individual story . Instead , they're trying to tell the | |
03:03 | stories of other people through research . This is what | |
03:06 | makes it a secondary source , a secondhand account . | |
03:09 | Because second hand accounts are more distant from the events | |
03:12 | they describe , their usually less emotional . The author | |
03:16 | of this second passage , for example , isn't worried | |
03:18 | about anything that's happening to the pioneers . They're not | |
03:20 | even referring to a specific set of pioneers . They're | |
03:23 | talking about what these migrants did in general . They're | |
03:25 | giving you background knowledge , general knowledge . That kind | |
03:29 | of distance lets the author of a secondhand account cover | |
03:32 | more ground . They don't have to stick to the | |
03:34 | narrative of one family or one person , or even | |
03:37 | one moment in time . 1st and 2nd hand accounts | |
03:41 | are both important . When I was a kid , | |
03:43 | they used to advertise sugary cereals as part of a | |
03:46 | balanced breakfast , little bowl of sugary cereal , a | |
03:49 | glass of milk , a bull , the fruit , | |
03:50 | maybe a sausage , some toast . Well , think | |
03:52 | of primary and secondary sources as part of a balanced | |
03:57 | information diet . A little a column , a little | |
04:00 | column B . You just got to take your knowledge | |
04:04 | spoon and dig in deep into your perspectives bowl . | |
04:08 | That's the thing that I made up just now . | |
04:11 | Diversity of perspectives does a body good . You can | |
04:15 | learn anything . David out |
DESCRIPTION:
What's the difference between a firsthand account and a secondhand account? What's the difference between a story of an event that's told by someone who was there, and one told by someone who wasn't there? Khan Academy is a nonprofit organization with the mission of providing a free, world-class education for anyone, anywhere. We offer quizzes, questions, instructional videos, and articles on a range of academic subjects, including math, biology, chemistry, physics, history, economics, finance, grammar, preschool learning, and more. We provide teachers with tools and data so they can help their students develop the skills, habits, and mindsets for success in school and beyond. Khan Academy has been translated into dozens of languages, and 15 million people around the globe learn on Khan Academy every month. As a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization, we would love your help!
OVERVIEW:
First and secondhand accounts | Reading | Khan Academy is a free educational video by .It helps students in grades 4 practice the following standards RI.4.6.
This page not only allows students and teachers view First and secondhand accounts | Reading | Khan Academy but also find engaging Sample Questions, Apps, Pins, Worksheets, Books related to the following topics.
1. RI.4.6 : Compare and contrast a firsthand and secondhand account of the same event or topic; describe the differences in focus and the information provided..