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How do I know if a source is popular?
Articles published in magazines and newspapers are written for a general audience. Sometimes library databases will include articles from both scholarly sources( e.g. scholarly journal articles) and popular sources (e.g. magazine and newspaper articles), so you need to be able to differentiate between the two.
General characteristics of popular sources include:
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- Do not contain original research
- Do not require (or assume) specialized knowledge
- Specialized vocabulary (jargon) is explained / defined, or not used
- Pictures are common, and are used in a decorative sense
- Advertisements are prominent
- Bibliographies are generally not included
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When/Why do I use a popular source?
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- When you need to understand a complex topic.
- When you need information on a current event.
- When you need information specific to a locale.
- When you need get a sense of opinions on an issue.
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Test: Popular
Explore the image below — mouseover the targets to learn more about the anatomy of a popular article. This example uses a magazine article, but the elements discussed also apply to websites, newspapers, and some books.
Mower, Sarah. "View: Sustainable Style—Shopping Consciously: Attention, Shoppers." Vogue. May 01 2007: 121,121, 122, 124. The Vogue Archive. 30 Jan. 2013 .
This article is part of a recurring series in the "VIEW" section of the magazine.
Most titles are descriptive enough to provide a sense of the article's content and style.
*Notice that the author's name is found as a part of the tagline (the text leading the reader from the title to the article).
This statistic was not created through original research performed by this article's author (or editor).