ENGL:2010 Foundations of the English Major
- Home
- Find Sources
- Articles
- Literary Criticism in InfoHawk+
- Primary Sources
- Evaluating Information
- Plagiarism and Citing Sources
- Narrowing a Topic and Developing a Research Question
What source to use?
Deciding whether to use a popular or scholarly source or an article or a book will depend on a variety of things. What are the requirements for the assignment? What kind of research are you doing? Are you looking for basic information or in-depth analysis on your topic?
Keep these things in mind as you choose the best resource for your assignments.
Quick Tip
Remember to login to InfoHawk+ at the start of your search. That allows you to save or favorite materials for review at a later date or helps make sure you have all the information for you bibliography or works cited page. You can also organize your favorites by project or class.
Types of Sources
Books
In general, use books written for an academic or scholarly audience instead of those written for a popular audience.
Why You Should Use Them
- Depth - books provide in-depth analysis of a topic
- Broad Coverage - books provide broad coverage over one or more topics
- Extended Research - books can be an invaluable source for extended research
Remember: you may only need to read one chapter of a scholarly book!
Find Books
InfoHawk+ is the tool for finding physical and electronic resources at our library, including books, e-books, and more. It searches Iowa Research Online, major databases, and unique UI Libraries collections like Iowa Digital Collections.
InfoHawk+ Tutorials
Learn to use InfoHawk+ with tutorials from University of Iowa Librarians. For questions, ask a librarian.
- InfoHawk+: Books: Learn basic techniques to perform a search and use filters to focus your results effectively
- InfoHawk+: Articles: Find articles using InfoHawk+.
- My Library Account: Customize your account, save searches, create lists, and more.
What are Journal Articles?
Journal articles, also known as scholarly articles, academic articles, or peer-reviewed articles, are written by scholars or professionals who are experts in their fields.
They are an excellent source for:
- Highly credible and trustworthy information
- Current research topics and findings
- Various forms of information, such as graphs, tables, images
- Bibliographies and references
Find Journal Articles in Databases:
Searching in a database is different from searching the web. Use these tips to start your search:
- Identify keywords from your thesis
- Think of synonyms for keywords
- Use AND to combine concepts; Use OR for synonyms
- Use an asterisk * to find word variations (run* finds run, runs, runner, running)
Also Known As...
Within this guide, "scholarly sources" refer to articles in peer-reviewed, academic journals. The terms scholarly journal, academic journal, and peer-reviewed journal are often used interchangeably. Scholarly sources can also include books written by scholars and researchers.
Additionally, "popular sources" refers mostly to articles found in magazines, newspapers, and general online information.
Primary and secondary sources vary across different disciplines. In general, a primary sources either provide a first hand account of a research topic (Humanities) or contain original research (Sciences). In the social sciences, these definitions vary by method or theoretical approach and either definition might apply.
This tutorial was created by the UCLA Library and shared here under the CC Attribution-NonCommercial-Share Alike.
- Last Updated: May 16, 2025 11:35 AM
- URL: https://guides.lib.uiowa.edu/englishmajor
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