| EVALUATING PERIODICALS: SCHOLARLY VS. POPULAR
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| Findings written by the researcher(s); very specific information, with the goal of scholarly communication; In-depth accounts of original findings. |
General information intended to entertain or inform; Secondary discussion of someone else's research; may include personal opinion/bias. |
Practical information for professionals working in the field or industry; Current news, trends, and products in a specific field or industry. |
| Author's credentials are provided. Author is usually a scholar or specialist in the field. |
Often, author is a journalist paid to write articles and may or may not be in an expert in the subject. |
Author usually a professional in the field, sometimes a journalist with subject expertise. |
| Students, scholars, and researchers. |
General Public. |
Professionals in the field. |
| Specialized terminology of the field; requires expertise in subject area. |
General-usage vocabulary; easily understandable to the general public. |
Not as technical as a scholarly journal but terminology is specialized. |
| Very few advertisements and photos. Many charts, graphs, tables. |
Lots of glossy advertisements and photos; some graphs and charts. |
Photos; some graphics; advertisements aimed at professionals in the field. |
| Structured; includes the article abstract, goals, objectives, methodology, results, discussion, and bibliography. |
Informal; may include non-standard formatting. May not present supporting evidence or conclusion. |
Informal; articles organized like a newsletter. Evidence drawn from personal experience. |
| Articles evaluated by peer-reviewers who are experts in the field; content, format, and style are edited. |
Content evaluated by editorial staff, not experts in the field. |
Evaluated by editorial staff, not peer-reviewed. |
| Required. Facts and quotes are verifiable. |
Rare. Little, if any, information about source materials is given. |
Occasional brief bibliographies, but not required. |
| Page numbers are consecutive throughout volume. |
Each issue begins on page 1. |
Each issue begins on page 1. |
| Annals of Mathematics, JAMA, Almost anything with Journal in the title. |
Sports Illustrated, National Geographic, Time, Newsweek.
| PC World, Psychology Today, Architectural Record. |
Based on Scholarly vs. Popular Materials by Amy VanScoy, NCSU Library.