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Professor, “You need to find a relevant, scholarly article for this assignment.”
Thinking to yourself, “Umm… what is a scholarly article and where do I find one?”
A scholarly resource is a resource that is written by an expert in his or her field. Some things to look for on a scholarly resource, specifically a scholarly article would be: publication information, what journal the article is from, Author(s)’ names and affiliations, references/citations, and a general ‘formal’ appearance. May or may not have a DOI (digital object identification) number.
A scholarly source is not always peer-reviewed or refereed. Peer-review means that the scholarly source has been reviewed by several peers before it has been published. This is not to say that scholarly articles are not reviewed before publication, but Peer-review normally means it was reviewed more diligently by other experts in the same field. You may have to check the journal’s website to REALLY know if it is peer-review.
The library pays for access to scholarly materials and the easiest way is to search is in the Library Search; which is SUPER multidisciplinary.
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You have this scholar/peer-review articles filter in health databases too: CINAHL, SocINDEX, SportDiscus, and APA PsycINFO.