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Peer-Reviewed Sources
The most-respected scholarly journals are peer-reviewed, which means that experts in their field other than the author and editor assess each article before it can be published. Peer reviewers help vet the new material presented in the context of what is already known, that the methodologies used are sound, and that the article contributes to the field.
For those reasons, peer-reviewed articles are more likely to be credible. Peer-reviewed journal articles are the official scholarly record, which means that if it’s an important development in research, it will probably turn up in a journal article eventually.
Here’s a longer explanation of the peer review process, which the author concludes is good but not perfect.
Parts of a Scholarly Article
The articles you use for your assignments must also be relevant to your research question—not just credible. Reading specific parts of an article can help save you time as you decide whether an article is relevant.
Movie: How to Read a Scholarly Article
Reading a scholarly article usually takes some effort. Here’s how to do it.
Activity: Parts of a Scholarly Article
Finding Scholarly Articles
Most scholarly articles are housed in subscription databases. Libraries (public, academic, or special) often provide access to subscription databases by paying a ost so patrons have access to them, free-of-charge. For instance, the GCC Library provides access to over 70 databases via its A-Z Databases List that are made available free of charge to people affiliated with the GCC. You can search for articles in these databases (containing both fulltext or citation and abstract or view a list of databases by subject. For more information, including how to search databases, see Subscription Databases.