Your professors have specific types of sources in mind when the ask you to do a research assignment. For the most part, you will be using academic books and scholarly journal articles, or for professional disciplines such as Business, you will be expected to use professional and trade magazines. There will be exceptions of course, but at present, we are looking at the general rule rather than the exceptions or special circumstances.
Words often used in assignment instructions to describe these sources are scholarly or academic or peer reviewed. You may also read that your sources must be secondary sources. These terms and their importance to students will be explained in greater depth in this module.
First, we will look at the two resource types you will be using the most often with research assignments, academic books, and scholarly journal articles.
SenecaLibraries (2013). Popular and scholarly sources [Video file]. Retrieved from https://youtu.be/wPj-BBB0le4
A transcript is available on the video's YouTube page.Summary table of the differences between scholarly (peer reviewed) journals, professional/trade journals, and magazines.
Magazines | Professional Journals | Scholarly Journals | |
Purpose/Intent | Inform, entertain | Professional development |
Original research Advance knowledge |
Scope | General, public interest | Practical information | In-depth |
Structure/Format |
Easy language Colourful, with ads |
Some professional vocabulary Fact, opinions, personal experience |
Vocabulary of discipline Very structured |
Author | Professional writers | Private experts or professional researchers | Professional researchers |
Supported by | Facts, but may be biased |
Limited research Professional knowledge |
Prior research |
References Peer Review |
No No |
Unusual Unusual |
Yes Yes |
Published by |
Commercial publishers, industry, individuals |
Trade or professional organizations | Scholarly/academic associations |
Some Definitions: A “periodical” is any publication that is published on a regular or periodic basis. Periodicals include journals, magazines, and newspapers, and are sometimes called “serials”. Periodicals may be grouped into the following broad categories:
Scholarly or Academic or Peer Reviewed Journals
The main purpose of a scholarly journal is to report on and disseminate original research or experimentation. The language of scholarly journals is that of the discipline. It assumes some scholarly background on the part of the reader. Authors are usually affiliated with research institutions like universities or government agencies, although in the sciences some authors may be employed by private industry. Many scholarly journals are published by scholarly or academic associations.
Articles published in scholarly journals go through a formal peer review process and authors always cite their sources in a list of references, a bibliography, endnotes or footnotes.
Professional or Trade Journals
The purpose of these journals is to inform members of an industry or profession through the publication of professional content that may combine fact, anecdote or opinion. Readers require some professional or industry vocabulary. Authors may or may not have an academic affiliation, but they will have expertise in the area in which they are writing. These publications are usually colourful and have advertising geared toward the profession. They are published by trade or professional organizations.
Articles published in professional or trade journals are not peer reviewed, though editors may invite submissions from known experts. Authors will rarely cite their sources.
Magazines
The goal of magazines is to entertain and inform. Authors are often professional writers rather than scholars or industry experts. The content may be factual, but may also be biased by editorial or publishing policy. Language should be easy to understand by all readers. Magazines are colourful, and have many pictures and advertisements.
Magazines are not peer reviewed and authors almost never cite their sources.
libnscu (2014, May 1). Peer review in 3 minutes. [Video file]. Retrieved from https://youtu.be/rOCQZ7QnoN0
A transcript is available on the video's YouTube page.
What is peer review?
Western University (2012, September 12). Grey literature tutorial [Video file]. Retrieved from https://youtu.be/m9-0ZYnCmAI
A transcript is available on the video's YouTube page.Grey literature is often produced as part of the process of running organizations and businesses for planning purposes and to report on activities, and include items such as reports, working papers, newsletters, government documents, speeches, white papers, urban plans, dissertations, and so on. They are created and distributed by the institution or business rather than by commercial publishers. For that reason; grey literature can be more current than literature in scholarly journals. However, because grey literature (usually) does not go through a peer review process, the quality can vary a great deal. Be sure to evaluate your source thoroughly.