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Ekstrom Library

Finding Scholarly Articles: Home

Tips on identifying and locating scholarly articles

Identifying Scholarly Journals

Peer review is the key distinction between scholarly and non-scholarly sources.*

In contrast to popular newspapers, magazines, websites, and books, scholarly sources are written by experts in a particular field and then reviewed (assessed, evaluated, etc.) by other experts in that field prior to publication.

Other clues that an article is scholarly:

  • The author is an expert.Most scholarly authors are affiliated with a college, university, or research institution. They hold relevant advanced degrees.
  • The article presents original research.This research can take many forms, but it often involves formal data analysis or theoretical discussion. Keep in mind that peer-reviewed journals also publish book reviews, opinion pieces, and other types of articles. While these articles can be useful, they are not the same as peer-reviewed research articles.
  • The article incorporates sophisticated, precise terminology. Experts writing for an expert audience typically use specialist language that will be unfamiliar to a reader outside the field.
  • The article includes a bibliography.Most scholarly articles include in-text citations or footnotes, as well as a lengthy bibliography, reference list, or works cited page. The bibliography helps the reader seek out the author’s sources and understand the larger “conversation” on a topic.

*"Peer Review in 3 Minutes" video created by NCSU Libraries.

Locating Scholarly Articles

Few databases (ex. JSTOR) include only scholarly sources. Usually databases include a mix of popular and scholarly material.

Some databases let you limit your search to only scholarly, peer-reviewed materials. Look under the Limits or Filters section on the database's search screen for the words "scholarly journals" or "peer-reviewed".

Examples:

How to Find Articles Using EBSCO Academic

When in Doubt...