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Research Process: Evaluate Sources

Explains how to find a topic and turn it into a search. Shows you how to find, evaluate, use, and cite books and articles for use in your research.

So You Need a Scholarly Article...

Scholarly journals (aka academic journals) publish articles by scholars and experts in their field and are intended for the academic community.  Many scholarly journals are also peer-reviewed (aka refereed), which means they have an editorial board with additional experts in the field who review all articles submitted for publication to ensure that they meet academic standards.

Popular journals are intended for the general public, and their journalists may have some knowledge of a field, but are usually not academic experts. Popular journals can be appropriate for some academic papers, but not all, so be sure to check with your professor.

How can you distinguish a scholarly journal from a popular journal?  Refer to the following chart, which highlights the differences between the two:

 

 

Popular

Scholarly

Audience

General Public

Scholars/Experts/Students

Authors

Reporters/Journalists

Scholars/Experts

Peer-Reviewed

No

Yes

Color Pictures

Many

Few

Advertisements

Many

Few

Article Length

1-5 pages

10+ pages

Article Titles

Short & Catchy

Long & Descriptive

Cites Sources

No

Yes

Anatomy of a Scholarly Article

Evaluation Tools

SIFT