Scholarly Journals vs. Popular Magazines
Scholarly journals are often confused with popular magazines like Time, Newsweek, and U.S. News & World Report. Both are published on a regular schedule (weekly, monthly, quarterly, etc.) and both consist of short articles on a variety of topics. This chart shows clues that you can look for to determine whether an article comes from a scholarly journal or a popular magazine.
Key Traits | Scholarly Journals | Popular Magazine |
---|---|---|
Length |
Long articles with in-depth analysis of a specific topic. |
Short articles with news, opinion, or an overview of a broad topic. |
Author |
Usually an expert. Name and credentials always provided. |
Usually a journalist. The author’s credentials usually not provided. |
Format |
Articles usually have a structured format with distinct sections, i.e., abstract, review, methodology, results, conclusion, bibliography. |
Usually written in continuous text, or in sections that do not follow a common standardized format. |
Language |
Usually written in very technical language. Expertise in the field may be required to understand it. |
Written in non-technical language that any reader can understand. |
Illustrations |
May include tables of statistics, graphs, maps, or photographs that directly support the text. |
May include eye-catching photos or illustrations that draw attention, but are not necessary to support clear understanding of the text. |
Sources |
Articles have a bibliography, works cited list, or footnotes to document books, articles, and other sources used by the author. |
Articles may mention sources in the text, but usually do not have a separate bibliography, footnotes, or works cited list. |
Examples |
American Behavioral Scientist, Criminology, Harvard Business Review, Journal of American History, Journal of Criminal Justice, Nature, Psychological Reports, Science |
Atlantic Monthly, The Economist, Newsweek, The Nation, National Geographic, The National Review, The New Yorker, Psychology Today, Time, U.S. News & World Report |
College professors will usually require some scholarly (also academic, peer-reviewed) sources.
Three things to look for: