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Learn how the same event can sound different depending on who tells the story — and why both versions matter.
Have you ever told a friend about something exciting that happened to you — like scoring a goal or seeing a rainbow? Your friend wasn't there, but they might tell someone else about it later. When they retell the story, it sounds a little different. That is because who tells a story changes how the story sounds.
People have been writing down events for thousands of years. Over time, readers learned that an account written by someone who was there feels different from one written by someone who heard about it later. Let's look at some moments in history when this mattered a lot.
So here is the big question this lesson answers: When two texts talk about the same event, how can you tell which one is firsthand and which is secondhand — and what makes them different?
Before we look at examples, you need four key ideas. Think of these as your "toolkit" for comparing accounts.
The diagram below shows what happens when the same event — a big school science fair — is described by two different writers. On the left is a firsthand account (the student who entered the fair). On the right is a secondhand account (a reporter who wrote about it later). Notice how each side focuses on different things.
Look at the left side. The student's account is full of feelings and personal moments. Now look at the right side. The reporter's account is full of facts, numbers, and quotes from other people. In the middle, you can see the details both accounts share — like the name of the event and the winner. Reading both gives you a more complete picture than reading just one.
When you sit down with a text, you can figure out if it is firsthand or secondhand by asking yourself three simple questions. Let's walk through them.
If the writer says "I saw…" or "I felt…," they were probably there. That means it is a firsthand account. If the writer talks about other people and never says "I," they probably learned about the event from someone else. That makes it a secondhand account.
A firsthand writer usually focuses on their own experience — what they saw, heard, smelled, and felt. A secondhand writer usually focuses on giving you information — facts, dates, numbers, and what different people said.
Firsthand accounts have details that only someone who was there would know, like "the room smelled like popcorn" or "my heart was pounding." Secondhand accounts have details that come from research, like "the event raised $2,000 for charity" or "according to the principal, this was the largest fair yet."
Follow this flowchart whenever you are unsure. Start at the top, ask each question, and the chart leads you to the answer. With practice, you will be able to tell the difference quickly — almost like a superpower!
Now let's read two short passages about the same event — a big thunderstorm — and pay attention to what each writer focuses on and what information each one gives us.
Did you notice the differences? Maya's journal is full of feelings ("I was scared," "I felt excited") and personal details (her dog Biscuit, the marbles sound). The newspaper article is full of facts and numbers (60 miles per hour, 300 homes, 4:15 p.m.). Both describe the same storm, but each one teaches you something the other does not.
Firsthand accounts live on the left side of this bar — close to feelings and personal details. Secondhand accounts live on the right side — close to facts and big-picture information. Some texts land in the middle, but most lean clearly one way or the other.
Let's practice comparing two short accounts about a class field trip to a nature center. Follow each step to see how a reader thinks through the differences.
Neither type of account is "better" than the other. Each one has strengths (things it does well) and limitations (things it does not do as well). The table below lays it all out.
| Firsthand Account | Secondhand Account | |
|---|---|---|
| Strengths | Gives vivid, personal details; shows real feelings; helps you imagine being there | Gives facts and the big picture; includes research and expert information; stays balanced |
| Limitations | Only shows one person's view; may leave out facts others would include | May miss the feelings and small details; the writer was not there to see everything |
| Common Pronouns | I, me, my, we, our | he, she, they, it, the [noun] |
| Typical Examples | Diary, personal letter, memoir, autobiography, blog post | Textbook, encyclopedia, news article, biography |
| Point of View | First person | Third person |
In older grades, you will hear the terms primary source and secondary source. These are very similar to firsthand and secondhand accounts — just fancier names! Here is a quick peek at how the ideas connect.
| What You Know Now | What You'll Learn Later | How They Connect |
|---|---|---|
| Firsthand account | Primary source | Both come from someone who experienced the event directly. |
| Secondhand account | Secondary source | Both are created by someone who learned about it after the fact. |
| Comparing focus & information | Analyzing point of view & author's purpose | Both skills ask: Why did the writer choose these details? |
By learning to compare firsthand and secondhand accounts now, you are building a skill that historians, scientists, and journalists use every day. You are already thinking like a researcher!
Try these five questions. Click "Show Answer" when you are ready to check your thinking. Each one gets a little harder — challenge yourself!
A firsthand account is written by someone who was there. It uses words like "I" and "my" and focuses on personal feelings, sensory details, and individual experiences. A secondhand account is written by someone who was not there. It uses words like "he," "she," or "they" and focuses on facts, numbers, dates, and the big picture. When you compare the two, you will notice that the focus shifts from personal to factual, and the information provided changes — one gives you emotions, the other gives you data.
The best readers know that reading both kinds of accounts gives you a richer, more complete understanding of any event or topic. Now that you know the difference, you can spot firsthand and secondhand accounts anywhere — in books, articles, websites, and even conversations. That is a powerful reading skill you will use for the rest of your life!