Criteria | Scholarly Article | Popular Article |
Authorship |
Authors are scholars and experts in the field. Authors are always named, and their institutional affiliation is given. |
Authors are staff writers or journalists. |
Publisher |
Publishers may be university presses or professional associations. Articles may be edited through the peer-review process by scholars in the same field of study. |
Publishers are corporations, working for profit. |
Content/Length |
Articles are longer with a focus on research projects, methodology and theory. Language is more formal, technical, using discipline specific terminology. |
Articles may be shorter with a general focus on the topic and written for news or entertainment value. |
Sources Cited |
Sources are cited and a bibliography or footnotes provided to document the research. |
Sources are not usually cited. |
Structure |
Article may include these sections: abstract, literature review, methodology, results, conclusion, and a bibliography. |
Specific format is not followed. |
Audience |
Audience consists of academics, scholars, researchers, and professionals. |
Audience is the general public. |
The C. A. R. S. Checklist is another way to evaluate information sources. It asks you to look for Credibility, Accuracy, Reasonableness, and Support before deciding to use or trust an information source.
Source: Robert Harris, Evaluating Internet Research Sources, https://www.virtualsalt.com/evalu8it.htm.
There's actually more to this than ads or no ads/references or no references. There are various sorts of "peer review." Also some folks would decide whether an article is valuable or not simply based on the reputation of the journal where it is published. One controversial measure of that is journal "impact factor." Here are some links in case you would like to explore these issues further.
What is Peer Review? How is it different than an Academic Article? Is it? This NC State University Libraries video answers your questions in 3 minutes!
Peer Review in Three Minutes from NC State University Libraries on Vimeo.
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Sources are always cited:
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Primary sources provide the raw data you use to support your arguments. Some common types of primary resources include manuscripts, diaries, court cases, maps, data sets, experiment results, news stories, polls, or original research. In many cases what makes a primary resource is contextual. For example, a biography about Abraham Lincoln is a secondary resource about Lincoln. However, if examined as a piece of evidence about the nature of biographical writing, or as an example of the biographer's writing method it becomes a primary resource.
However the category of primary or secondary is often determined by how the source is being used. Often newspapers are considered secondary sources as journalists report, analyze, and interpret events and the experience of others. Newspapers can also be used as primary sources. If you are researching how American attitudes on welfare spending have changed during the past twenty years, newspaper editorials can serve as primary sources of public opinion. Librarians and your instructor can help you identify primary and secondary sources for your projects.
Disciplines |
Primary source examples |
Anthropology, Archaeology |
Articles describing research, ethnographies, surveys, cultural and historical artifacts |
Communications, Journalism |
News (printed, radio, TV, online), photographs, blogs, social media sites |
Education, Political Science, Public Policy |
Government publications, laws, court cases, speeches, test results, interviews, polls, surveys |
Fine Arts |
Original art work, photographs, recordings of performances and music, scripts (film, theatre, television), music scores, interviews, memoirs, diaries, letters |
History |
Government publications, newspapers, photographs, diaries, letters, manuscripts, business records, court cases, videos, polls, census data, speeches |
Language and Literature |
Novels, plays, short stories, poems, dictionaries, language manuals |
Psychology, Sociology, Economics |
Articles describing research, experiment results, ethnographies, interviews, surveys, data sets |
Sciences |
Articles describing research and methodologies, documentation of lab research, research studies |
Secondary Sources analyze primary sources, using primary source materials to answer research questions. Secondary sources may analyze, criticize, interpret or summarize data from primary sources. The most common secondary resources are books, journal articles, or reviews of the literature. Secondary sources may also be primary sources. For example if someone studies the nature of literary criticism in the 19th century then a literary critique from the 19th century becomes a primary resource.
However the category of primary or secondary is often determined by how the source is being used. Often newspapers are considered secondary sources as journalists report, analyze, and interpret events and the experience of others. Newspapers can also be used as primary sources. If you are researching how American attitudes on welfare spending have changed during the past twenty years, newspaper editorials can serve as primary sources of public opinion. Librarians and your instructor can help you identify primary and secondary sources for your projects.
Disciplines |
Secondary source examples |
Anthropology, Archaeology |
Reviews of the literature, critical interpretations of scholarly studies |
Communications, Journalism |
Interpretive journal articles, books and blogs about the communications industry. |
Education, Political Science, Public Policy |
Reviews of the literature, critical interpretations of scholarly studies |
Fine Arts |
Critical interpretations of art and artists—biographies, reviews, recordings of live performances |
History |
Interpretive journal articles and books |
Language and Literature |
Literary criticism, biographies, reviews, text books |
Psychology, Sociology, Economics |
Reviews of the literature, critical interpretations of scholarly studies |
Sciences |
Publications about the significance of research or experiments |
There are so many types of primary resources it is important to define your parameters by:
On the next tab, Library Primary Resources, there are examples of terms you may search to find books with primary resource and links to archival collections at Hiram College Library.
Hiram Primary Source Subjects Examples
Chicago Ill Maps
Jobs Steve 1955-2011 Interviews
Pound Ezra 1885-1972 Correspondence
Presidents United States Archives
Roosevelt Eleanor 1884-1962 Diaries
United States Population Statistics
Hiram also has a number of Newspapers that may be primary sources.
Search for books using Hiram College Library catalog.
Use the Books Images & More tab, Advanced search: Subject. The subjects listed above are examples of ways to locate books that contain primary resources.
Current statistical information from all sectors of the United States economy including the census, budget, economic, and other sets. (Was information formerly grouped together in STAT-USA.
Compiles statistics on gender topics at the country level with statistics drawn from a variety of sources. Updated as additional statistics become available.
Primary Source: An authoritative document relating to a subject, which is used in the preparation of a later work, such as an original record or a contemporary document. In the humanities, a primary source is the document being analyzed; in the sciences it is a journal article reporting the results of original research. Primary sources are also called original sources or source material.
Secondary Source: A publication that digests, analyzes, evaluates, and/or interprets the information in primary sources.
Tertiary Source: A source that compiles, analyzes, and/or digests secondary sources.
Primary | Secondary | Tertiary | |
Timing of Publication Cycle |
Tends to come first in the publication cycle. | Tends to come second in the publication cycle. | Tends to come last in the publication cycle. |
Formats – depends in part on the type of analysis being done and the subject discipline |
Newspapers, weekly and monthly magazines, letters, diaries. For scientists, scholarly journal articles. |
Scholarly journal articles and books that build upon the primary sources. | Reference books (encyclopedias, for example) or text books. |
Example: Historian (studying the Vietnam War) |
Newspaper articles, weekly news magazines, monthly magazines, recordings of TV news broadcasts, diaries, letters, and diplomatic records. |
Scholarly journal articles and books analyzing the war, which probable footnote the primary sources. | Encyclopedias and other reference books and text books that include information about the Vietnam War. |
Example: Literary Critic (studying the literature of the Vietnam War) | Novels, poems, plays, diaries, correspondence. |
Scholarly journal articles and books analyzing the literature. Biographies of the authors who wrote the primary sources. |
Encyclopedias and other reference books and text books that include information about the literature or the authors. |
Example: Psychologist (studying the effects of PTSD) | Article in a scholarly journal that reports original research and its methodology, as well as notes taken by a clinical psychologist. | Scholarly journal articles or books that synthesize the results of original research. | Encyclopedias and other reference books and text books that include information about PTSD. |
Example: Scientist (studying Agent Orange exposure) | Article in a scholarly journal that reports original research. | Scholarly journal articles or books that synthesize the results of original research. |
Encyclopedias and other reference books and text books that include information about the literature or the authors. |
Based on documents from:
William Madison Randall Library, University of North Carolina Wilmington
11694 Hayden St. | P.O. Box 67 | Hiram, OH 44234