Choosing & Identifying the Best Source Types for Your Research
Learn about all the different source types and when they are appropriate and helpful to you in the research process: encyclopedias, Wikipedia, books, scholarly articles, popular articles and magazines, trade magazines, news, and websites!
Many databases indicate whether the article is "academic" or "peer-reviewed" in the full citation.
Also, you can limit your search results to "academic journals" or "peer-reviewed" BEFORE or AFTER you search, so your results will all be scholarly material.
If this information is not available, another option is to look up the title of journalin a database called Ulrichsweb, which gives publication information on all types of periodicals.
If in doubt, ask a librarian! We'll be glad to help.
Example 1: You can limit your search immediately BEFORE you search.
OR
Example 2: You can limit to "Academic Journals" or "Scholarly Journals" (depending on the database you are in) AFTER you conduct your search, thus filtering your results.
OR
What is the difference between popular magazines, trade journalsandscholarly (also called academic or peer-reviewed) journals? Check out the table below.
Referred to as a "journal"; may have "journal" in its name
"Peer reviewed"means that the article has gone through a vetting or review process. That is, experts in the same field as the author of the article have evaluated the author's scholarship and made sure that his or her methods, research, theories, and conclusions are sound and backed up by other scholarship or research. Often, a double-blind peer-review process is used, where the author and reviewers are unknown to each other, to ensure that personal bias does not affect the evaluation of scholarship.
Journals may be scholarly or academicwithout necessarily being peer-reviewed. In this case, a editor in the discipline or an editorial board makes the decision to publish another expert's work. Ask your professor whether or not your article needs to be peer-reviewed in addition to being scholarly.
The Rider University Libraries subscribes to a database called Ulrichsweb that gives "detailed information on more than 300,000 periodicals (also called serials) of all types: academic and scholarly journals, e-journals, peer-reviewed titles, popular magazines, newspapers, newsletters, and more."
You can search by journal title, keyword, ISSN number, and subject area.
Below is the record for a journal called Marvels & Tales. This record tells you that Marvels & Tales is an academic or scholarly journal that is peer-reviewed. The term Ulrichsweb uses is "refereed" (think what a referee in sports does!)
Learn to make sense of a scholarly article! This interactive image allows you to hover over each section of a scholarly article and learn more about what it means.