Scholarly vs Popular Journal Articles

In choosing articles to use as background for research, it is important to be able to distinguish between the scholarly and the popular press. In general, articles from the scholarly press are viewed as having more "authority"; they are written by experts in a field, reviewed by other experts and represent the results of scholarly research. Articles from the popular press are written and published more quickly; they may represent a less "authoritative" or expert point of view. Depending on the nature of your research, you may want to focus on the scholarly press as opposed to the popular press, you may want to consider both points of view, or you may want to focus on just the popular press.

There are clues, both visual and content-oriented, which can help you distinguish between the scholarly and popular presses. It is important to be aware that when you view fulltext articles online through a computer terminal, you still need to make these distinctions. Here are some characteristics which may help you identify whether an article is from the scholarly or the popular press.

Scholarly Press (often referred to as a "journal" article)

Popular Press (often referred to as a "magazine" article)

Important: Some indexes, such as "Expanded Academic Index" (available online through INFOTRAC) include both scholarly and popular articles

Material adapted from "What is a Scholarly Journal?", Chuck Dintrone, Coordinator of Bibliographic Instruction, San Diego State University, March 1991.


© Bush Library, Hamline University, 1996
This document may be freely distributed in its entirety for educational purposes only
Karen Campbell, January 1996