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A scholarly article introduces new knowledge based on original research or experimentation. Many scholarly articles undergo a process called peer review. In this process, experts in the field scrutinize articles before they are published, resulting in a body of quality scholarly information. This guide will teach you to identify and read scholarly articles like a scholar!
This short video from Cornell University provides a nice introduction to identifying a scholarly article.
Both primary and secondary sources can be useful to you in your research, but you need to be able to distinguish which is which. Both types of information sources can be found using library databases, and both may even be peer-reviewed sources. So how do you tell which is which? Refer to the table below for some quick ways to determine if the source you've found is a primary source or a secondary source.
DOI = Digital Object Identifier
This is a unique alphanumeric identifier assigned to journal articles and book chapters. It's becoming more common for journal articles in the sciences and social sciences. If you find a source that has a DOI, include that in the citation.
No DOI? No sweat! Just cite it without a DOI.
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