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Theatre Arts: Popular vs. Scholarly

This guide identifies research resources that can be used in projects assigned in Theatre Arts classes.

Popular Sources

Magazines are considered popular sources.  They usually have the following characteristics:
•  Written for a general audience
•  Articles are short and entertaining
•  Lots of illustrations, usually in color
•  Contain advertisements
•  Written by a staff of writers
•  Written at about a 9th grade reading level

Scholarly Sources

Journals are considered scholarly sources.  Other terms used to describe journals are academic, peer-reviewed, or
refereed.  Journals share the following characteristics:
•  Written for a highly educated audience
•  Articles are written by subject matter experts and may be peer-reviewed *
•  Illustrations tend to be graphical - charts, tables, graphs
•  Articles have works cited pages
•  Contain few or no advertisements

 

* Article manuscripts are read and reviewed by members of an editorial board who determine whether or not the article is suitable for publication. 

Structure of a Scholarly Article

Peer-reviewed articles generally have distinctive parts.  You may not be able to understand an entire scholarly article.  The
author abstract, the introduction, the results, and the conclusion may be all you need for your paper. 
Explore this infographic developed by the North Carolina State University Libraries:
Staff LADR