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Identifying Scholarly vs. Popular Sources   
 
 

In academic research it is important to distinguish between scholarly (or academic or expert) and non-scholarly (or popular) sources. While both types of sources are valuable in research, most academic work will favor scholarly sources over popular ones. Below you'll find a brief comparison of scholarly and popular sources.

One reference source, in addition to the chart below, that can help you make the distinction between scholarly and popular sources, as well as help you determine credibility of periodical sources, is:

Ulrich's International Periodical Directory

A comprehensive directory that provides basic bibliographic and access information for almost all of the journals, magazines, and newspapers published worldwide. Periodical titles are listed by subject and title. Ulrich's also provides basic qualitative information about many of the periodicals, including audience, whether it is peer reviewed or not, and abstracts, and includes reviews from a variety of sources, including Magazines for Libraries.

Scholarly Sources Popular Sources
Audience

Scholars, researchers, practitioners

General public

Authors

Experts in the field (i.e., faculty members, researchers)

Articles are signed, often including author's credentials and affiliation

Journalists or freelance writers

Articles may or may not be signed

Footnotes

Includes a bibliography, references, notes and/or works cited section

Rarely includes footnotes

Editors

Editorial board of outside scholars (known as peer review)

Editor works for publisher

Publishers

Often a scholarly or professional organization or academic press

Commercial, for profit

Writing Style

Assumes a level of knowledge in the field

Usually contains specialized language (jargon)

Articles are often lengthy

Easy to read – aimed at the layperson

Articles are usually short, and often entertain as they inform

General Characteristics

Primarily print with few pictures

Tables, graphs, and diagrams are often included

Usually few or no ads – if there are ads, they are for books, journals, conferences, or services in the field

Often have "journal," "review," or "quarterly" as part of the title

Successive issues in a volume often have continuous pagination

Usually have a narrow subject focus

Contains ads and photographs

Glossy

Often sold at newsstands or bookstores

Usually restarts pagination with each issue

Usually have quite a broad subject focus

This guide was adapted from the University of Oregon Libraries

This page is maintained by:
Stephanie Brenenson
Library Instruction Coordinator
brenenso@fiu.edu
Florida International University
Miami, FL

Last revised: September 2005

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