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WR151: The World of Higher Education

Scholarly or Popular?

Types of resources
Characteristics Popular Resources Scholarly Resources Community Resources
Audience general public scholars in the field within the community or the public

Author

member of the public, a journalist, or an author someone with academic expertise in the field a member of the community of interest
Published immediately or following editing following extensive research, editing, and peer review wide range of formats

 

Scholarly Resources

Scholarly Books & Journal Articles

Written by people with academic expertise in the field. Use these to understand current and past research on your topic. Academic books are more broadly focused than articles. Use books to understand background information and the context of your topic. Articles will be narrowly focused and include jargon. Be sure to check the bibliography for other scholarly sources.

Dissertations & Theses

Written by graduating PhD and Masters students, these represent a deep exploration of a niche topic. Contains an extensive works cited section.

Literature & Systematic Reviews 

Review of scholarship on a topic, including information gaps and opportunities for further research.

Popular Resources

News, Media, & General Trade Books

Created by journalists and authors, these resources go through an editing process. Use these to understand the wider framing of conversations around your topic at a given point in time.

Social Media, Streaming, & Other Online Conversations

Unmediated online sources can help you understand conversations around your topic in the public sphere. This is a way to find direct information from opinions to contemporaneous reactions involving your topic.

Community Resources

Self-Published Materials

Examples include: Grassroots Archives, Indigenous Knowledge, Oral Histories, Nonprofit Advocacy Groups, Zines

Types of knowledge outside academia are often devalued or excluded from research and scholarship. Look for community voices on your topic by thinking outside the box of traditional scholarship.  

Look for voices inside of impacted communities. This could include social media posts or zines written by and for a particular group of people.

Librarian

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Kristina Bush
she/her
Contact:
617-353-3738