When conducting research, scholars often rely on articles from scholarly journals rather than popular magazines. See the table below for a list of some differences that exist between these two types of resources.
|
Characteristics |
Scholarly Journal |
Popular Press |
| Appearance |
|
|
|
Audience |
Scholars and students |
General audience |
|
Authors |
Scholars in the field of study |
Reporters, usually not experts on the subject |
|
Documentation |
Sources cited in footnotes and/or bibliography |
Sources not cited or cited informally |
|
Purpose |
Report results of original research or experimentation |
Provide general information |
|
Article Acceptance |
Many scholarly journals are "refereed journals" - they undergo a process called "peer-review" where other scholars in the field examine the articles before being published. |
Written by hired reporters, edited by magazine editors, and published. |
|
Examples |
|
|
Reproduced from Duke University Libraries with permission under Creative Commons License CC BY-NC-SA 3.0
You can limit your search in the databases to only display search results that are scholarly, peer-reviewed articles. Below are examples. The JSTOR database contains only scholarly articles so there is no limiter in that database.

