Answer: A scholarly journal contains articles that have been reviewed by experts and considered to meet the requirements necessary to be included in the journal. Their main purpose is to disseminate research rather than to make a profit.
Use a database that allows you to limit your search to scholarly journals for example Academic Search Premier
Use these criteria to judge the journal in your hand
Scholarly Journals |
Popular Magazines |
|
| ALTERNATE NAMES | Also called Peer-reviewed Journals or Refereed Journals | Also called Trade Journals |
| APPEARANCE OF JOURNAL | Mainly text, plain paper, very little color, minimal advertising, may contain charts and illustrations | Glossy paper, lots of color, photographs, lots of advertising |
| TITLE OF JOURNAL | Frequently contains the word journal, bulletin, annals or review | Catchy and easily recognized |
| ARTICLE CONTENTS | Introduction, methods, results, conclusion, bibliography, references, graphs, diagrams, author's credentials | Opinions, general facts, entertaining articles |
| INTENDED AUDIENCE | Subject experts and students | General public |
| PURPOSE OF JOURNAL | To spread research results to experts in the field, researchers and students | To entertain, and to make money for the publishers |
| TITLE OF ARTICLES | Long, descriptive, specific and formal | Informal, short, catchy and often funny. They may sound like a newspaper headline |
| ARTICLE AUTHOR'S CREDENTIALS | Expert in the subject. The author's credentials, such as university affiliation and degrees, are clearly stated | Reporters and journalists, but may not be clear, and could be anyone |
| LENGTH OF ARTICLES | Usually more than 5 pages | Usually less than 5 pages |
| EXAMPLES |
Journal of Management in Engineering Journal of Materials Chemistry |
People, Newsweek Time, Psychology Today |
Use a database, such as Ulrichsweb.com, which will tell you if a journal is scholarly (peer-reviewed or refereed)
|
Page Maintained by Carol
Oshel
Last Updated: May 26, 2005 |
|
Back |