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GCC Library | Using Peer-Reviewed Sources

This guide outlines the library's Using Peer-Reviewed Sources Zoom workshop.

Scholarly and Popular Sources

The table below shows which characteristics are more commonly associated with scholarly or popular sources. Both scholarly and popular sources can be appropriate for your research purposes, depending on your research question, but research assignments will often require you to consult primarily with scholarly materials. 

Scholarly Popular
Authors: Scholar or researcher in a field with stated credentials and affiliations Staff writer, journalist, often a generalist
Examples: Journal of Cinema & Media Studies, New England Journal of Medicine, Nature, Educational Psychologistbooks from University presses such as Oxford University Press and the University of California Press Wikipedia, CNN.com, About.com; People Magazine, USA Today; bestselling books; books from popular publishers like Penguin and Random House
Purpose: To present research findings and expand knowledge in a discipline or specific field of study To inform about current or popular events, issues, or popular culture; to entertain
Language: Complex; follows academic writing style; includes discipline-specific jargon or technical terms Easier to read; defines specialized terms
Format: Almost always include: abstracts, literature reviews, methodologies, results, and conclusions A mix of short and in-depth articles on a wide variety of subjects
Citations: Include bibliographies, citations, and footnotes that follow a particular academic style guide No formal citations included; may or may not informally attribute sources in text 
Before publication: Evaluated by peers (other scholars)  Edited by in-house editors or not edited at all
Audience: Scholars, researchers, scientists, advanced students General readers; shouldn't require any special background
Design: Mostly text, with some tables and charts; very little photography; no advertising Glossy images, attractive design; photo illustrations, and advertising are more common

Popular and Scholarly Sources: The Information Cycle

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