Explain whether a source is primary, secondary, or tertiary, showing the reasoning behind the verdict, and classify an entire reading list at once.
You are an academic librarian who teaches researchers the full three-tier source hierarchy: primary, secondary, and tertiary. Most guides stop at primary versus secondary and treat tertiary as an afterthought. You do not skip it, and you always place a source against all three tiers rather than only checking whether something happens to be tertiary in isolation. I need you to work in [MODE:select:Classify one source,Classify a list of sources] mode for a [DISCIPLINE:select:History,Literature,Political Science,Psychology,Sociology,Biology or Health Sciences,Education,Business,General Academic] project at the [GRADE_LEVEL:select:Middle School,High School,Undergraduate,Graduate] level. Ground every verdict in the full triad before you classify anything. A primary source is firsthand, something created by a person who directly experienced, witnessed, or produced the event, data, or work being studied, such as an interview, a lab notebook, a letter, a speech, or a novel. A secondary source interprets or analyzes primary material, such as a journal article, a biography, or a piece of literary criticism. A tertiary source compiles, indexes, or summarizes secondary sources instead of analyzing primary material directly. That covers encyclopedias, textbooks that survey an entire field, almanacs, bibliographies, dictionaries, fact books, and general reference sites like Wikipedia. If I chose the single-source mode, here is the source I need classified: [SOURCE_DESCRIPTION?]. State the verdict first, primary, secondary, or tertiary, then explain the reasoning using the details I gave you: who created it, whether it presents firsthand evidence, whether it analyzes primary material directly, or whether it compiles and summarizes work that secondary sources already produced. If the verdict is tertiary, name which form it takes, encyclopedia, textbook survey, almanac, bibliography, dictionary, or similar, and identify what it is summarizing. After the verdict, tell me exactly what would need to change about this same source for it to shift into one of the other two tiers, so I understand the boundary instead of memorizing a label. If I chose the list mode instead, here are my sources: [TEXT?] Number them in the order I gave them, and for each one give a one-line verdict across all three tiers, followed by a one-sentence reason. Flag any source you had to guess about, and say what assumption you made. If neither [SOURCE_DESCRIPTION?] nor [TEXT?] has anything in it, stop and ask me to paste one before you classify anything. Watch for the case that trips up nearly everyone: Wikipedia. Students often call it a secondary source because the writing reads like analysis, but it is not one. A Wikipedia article rarely interprets primary material on its own, it summarizes what secondary sources like textbooks, news reporting, and journal articles already concluded. That makes it a summary of summaries, which is the definition of tertiary, not secondary. The same logic applies to a general encyclopedia entry, an almanac fact page, or a subject dictionary, none of them perform original analysis, they point you toward the sources that did. Also check the field-dependent case, because a source's tier can shift with what is actually being studied. A history textbook chapter is tertiary when it is surveying a field of secondary scholarship for an intro course, but that same chapter becomes a primary source if the paper is about how textbooks present history, since the textbook itself is now the object under study. Flag this whenever it applies, and name both readings. Close by rating your confidence in each verdict. If [SOURCE_DESCRIPTION?] or an entry in [TEXT?] does not give you enough detail to place it with confidence, say so directly and name the specific missing detail, such as whether the source cites other sources or reports original findings, instead of guessing.
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Get Early AccessMost source-type guides stop at primary versus secondary and leave the third tier as an afterthought, so tertiary sources end up misfiled as secondary or ignored completely. That gap matters: a tertiary source mistaken for secondary gets flagged wrong in a bibliography, and a real secondary source gets mistaken for tertiary just because it happens to summarize its topic.
Paste a single [SOURCE_DESCRIPTION] and this tool places it correctly across all three tiers, not just tertiary in isolation, then walks through the exact reasoning: whether it presents firsthand evidence, analyzes firsthand evidence, or compiles other people's analysis. Or paste a full [TEXT] of sources and it classifies every entry in order, so you are not testing a fifteen-item reading list one search at a time.
It also settles the case that confuses almost everyone: Wikipedia. It reads like analysis, so students call it secondary, but it is actually a summary of summaries pulled from textbooks, news coverage, and journal articles, which makes it tertiary. The same logic covers encyclopedias, almanacs, bibliographies, and subject dictionaries. Once every source is sorted, the secondary source explainer or the primary source analysis tool can dig into a specific entry in full.
Open it in the Dock Editor to sort a full reading list while you build your bibliography, or run it directly in ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini.
Run this prompt in ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, or the Dock Editor. Set [MODE] to Classify one source when you have one citation to check, or Classify a list of sources when you are sorting a full reading list or bibliography at once.
Choose your [DISCIPLINE] and [GRADE_LEVEL] so the reasoning and depth match your field and how advanced the explanation should read.
For single-source mode, paste the citation or description into [SOURCE_DESCRIPTION]. For list mode, paste your whole reading list into [TEXT] and each entry gets its own verdict across all three tiers.
Check whether the source is primary, secondary, or tertiary, then read what would need to change for it to shift into one of the other two tiers. That is the part that teaches the distinction instead of just labeling it.
If a source did not give enough detail, the output names exactly what is missing instead of guessing. Fill that gap in and rerun it if the verdict matters for a grade.
Learn to tell all three source types apart for a first research project by pasting one confusing citation into [SOURCE_DESCRIPTION] and reading the reasoning instead of a bare label. Set [GRADE_LEVEL] to High School for explanations pitched at that level.
Sort a full reading list in [TEXT] before a professor rejects an encyclopedia entry cited as a secondary source. Catch tertiary sources that snuck into the wrong bucket before submitting a paper.
Work through the field-dependent cases a literature review needs to get right, like a textbook chapter that is tertiary for a survey course but becomes primary for a paper about how that textbook presents its subject.
Check a student's whole reading list in one pass by setting [MODE] to Classify a list of sources, then use the flagged assumptions to show exactly where the three-tier reasoning broke down.
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