Scholarly Journals vs. Popular Magazines

Scholarly Journals vs. Popular Magazines

Criteria

Scholarly Journals

Popular Magazines

Example Covers  Covers of scholarly journals such as The Journal of Asian Studies and The Paris Review. Covers of popular magazines such as Time, Newsweek, and U.S. News.
Author  Usually a scholar or researcher with expertise in the subject area; Author's credentials and/or affiliation are given. Author's name may or may not be given; often a professional writer; may or may not have expertise in the subject area.
Audience  Other scholars, researchers, and students. General public; the interested non-specialist.
Language  Specialized terminology or jargon of the field; requires expertise in subject area (or a good specialized dictionary!). Vocabulary in general usage; easily understandable to most readers.
Graphics  Graphs, charts, and tables; very few advertisements and photographs. Graphs, charts and tables; lots of glossy advertisements and photographs.
Layout & Organization  Structured; generally includes the article abstract, objectives, methodology, analysis, results (evidence), discussion, conclusion, and bibliography. Informal; may include non-standard formatting. May not present supporting evidence or a conclusion.
Accountability  Articles are evaluated by peer-reviewers or referees who are experts in the field; edited for content, format, and style. Articles are evaluated by editorial staff, not experts in the field; edited for format and style.
References  Always has a list of references or bibliography; sources of quotes and facts are cited and can be verified. Rarely has a list of references; usually does not give complete information about sources of information.
Examples   Annals of Mathematics, Journal of Abnormal Psychology, History of Education Quarterly, almost anything with Journal in the title.  Time, Newsweek, The Nation, The Economist 

Adapted from a LibGuide by Beth Rohloff at Tufts University's Tisch Library.

Finding Scholarly, Peer-Reviewed Articles