Environmental Conversations 110A & 110B: Life in the Anthropocene
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- In-Class Research Activity -- Day 2 This link opens in a new window
Librarian
Audrey Gunn
Contact:
304 Rolvaag Memorial Library
1510 St. Olaf Avenue
St. Olaf College
Northfield, MN 55057
1510 St. Olaf Avenue
St. Olaf College
Northfield, MN 55057
507-786-3658
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Subjects: Biology, Chemistry, Chemistry/Biology, Computer Science, Creative Writing, Data Science, Engineering, English, Environmental Conversations, Environmental Studies, Kinesiology, Mathematics, Mathematics, Statistics, and Computer Science, Neuroscience, Nursing, Physics, Public Health, Statistics
Evaluating Research Sources: Questions to Consider
Comparing Popular and Scholarly Articles
Articles in Popular Magazines and Newspapers | Articles in Scholarly (Peer-Reviewed) Journals |
Written by journalists or magazine staff | Written by experts affiliated with a research institution (university, hospital, etc.) |
Purpose is to inform, persuade, or entertain the general public | Purpose is to communicate research findings to other experts |
Use language understood by the general public | Use precise, discipline-specific language |
Do not include a formal bibliography, works cited, or references list | Always include a bibliography, works cited, and/or references list |
Often include bright, colorful photos | Often display data in black-and-white charts/graphs |
Evaluated for publication by a magazine editor | Have been evaluated and recommend for publication by other experts in the peer-review process |
Popular magazines are often published weekly | Scholarly journals are often published monthly or quarterly |
Understanding the Scholarly Publication Process
What are scholarly articles?
In the sciences, many scholarly articles (also called peer-reviewed articles) include a description of a specific research study, the results of the study, and a discussion of the significance of these results. Other scholarly articles may provide a summary and analysis of all recently-published research on a given topic.
What is the peer-review process?
- Researchers write an article and submit it to a scholarly journal (also called a refereed journal or a peer-reviewed journal).
- The journal editors send the article to other expert researchers in the field, known as peer reviewers.
- The peer reviewers read the article and make a recommendation regarding whether the article is worthy of being published in the journal. They will consider factors such as the significance of the research findings and the quality of the scholarship. They will typically also suggest changes to improve the article.
- The journal editors decide whether to publish the article based on the peer reviewers' feedback. Often, they will ask the authors to make changes suggested by the peer reviewers before the article is re-considered for publication.
Be aware that not everything published in a scholarly journal is a peer-reviewed article. Scholarly journals also include book reviews, editorials, and other content that has not been peer-reviewed.
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