Example
Comparing Scholarly Journals and Popular Magazines
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Scholarly journals and popular magazines often differ in typical ways, yet there are many publications that display characteristics of both types. The following list should be helpful in determining whether your periodical can be considered a scholarly journal or a popular magazine.

 
Scholarly Journals
Popular Magazines
Purpose
  • to distribute highly specific knowledge to experts and students;
  • to make more money by supplying a platform to advertisers who want to reach a particular audience
Frequency
  • annual, semiannual, or quarterly
  • monthly, weekly, or even daily
Format
  • usually use plain paper
  • often plain covers, with little design
  • most have a square binding
  • spine may contain the issue information
  • online site hosted by .edu or .org site
  • usually use glossy paper
  • often with colorful, slick covers
  • most are folded with a staple along center line
  • rarely enough room on spine for information
  • online site hosted by .com site
Publisher
  • may be published by an association, institution or scholarly press
  • are published for profit
Audience
  • are distributed to a specific audience
  • are widely marketed and distributed
Pagination
  • may have continuous (i.e., consecutive) pagination
  • usually restarts pagination with each issue
Advertisements
  • if any, they are directed towards specialists (job openings for researchers, upcoming conferences, other journals)
  • include colorful advertisements for everything from automobiles to cigarettes
Contents
  • academic articles, book reviews, and letters to the editor
  • may include current events, international news, fiction, humor, product reviews, sports news, book (popular) reviews, celebrity interviews, etc.
Authorship
  • are signed by the author(s)
  • are written by experts or specialists in the field
  • include the author's credentials, such as his/her position and affiliated institution
  • may or may not be signed
  • may be written by a non-expert (e.g., reporters)
  • may or may not include author's position and affiliated institution
Abstracts
  • may begin with an abstract
  • do not begin with an abstract
References
  • include references (works cited, bibliography) and/or notes citing the author's research
  • do not include references or notes, sometimes a suggested reading list, rarely citation notes
Research
  • may report new research or review past research
  • usually not reporting cutting-edge research
Language
  • contain specialized language
  • are written for the general public; contain little or no specialized language
Length
  • can be lengthy
  • mostly are short
Reviewed
  • may be refereed, meaning that the articles are reviewed by experts in the field
  • articles reviewed only by the editor

 

 

Example
Comparing Scholarly Journals and Popular Magazines
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