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1.2: Scholarly and Popular Sources

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    82829
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    Scholarly vs Popular Sources

    In academic assignments and writing, we need to use scholarly sources, so it is important to know the difference between scholarly and popular sources.

    Which sources are scholarly and which are popular? Click on the images below to learn more

     

    An interactive or media element has been excluded from this version of the text. You can view it online here:
    https://openeducationalberta.ca/libraryskills200/?p=28

    Examples of popular and scholarly resources:

    Popular: Science magazine, newspaper, science blog, non-fiction boo k

    Scholarly: Academic journal, textbook, dictionary

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    What’s the difference between a scholarly and a popular source?

    Scholarly sources — Scholarly sources present original research (in an article or thesis) or compile research (in a textbook, dictionary or encyclopedia). They are written by researchers or scholars and are designed for an academic audience. Scholarly resources use specialized, scientific vocabulary. Scholarly resources contain references to back up information and they are considered to be reliable resources.

    Popular sources — Popular sources present information with the intent of informing or entertaining. Popular sources do not contain original research but can summarize or report on original research. They are written by non-experts for a wide audience. Popular sources use accessibly language. Popular sources to not usually contain references and they are not considered to be a reliable academic source.

     

    This chart covers the characteristics of popular and scholarly sources

      Scholarly
      Popular
     Content Contains original research data Covers popular interest topics
     Authors Expert scholars with their credentials listed Not experts, often journalists or writers
     Audience Scholars, researchers General public
     Purpose To share research findings and expand knowledge
    To inform or entertain
     Style Straight forward design with complex language Flashy, eye catching design with accessible language
     References     Contains references No references
     Peer-review Articles are peer-reviewed Articles are not peer-reviewed

    1.2: Scholarly and Popular Sources is shared under a CC BY-NC license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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