|
SCHOLARLY
|
POPULAR
|
|
General Interest
|
Trade / Professional
|
Sensational
|
LENGTH
|
Long; 8 pages or more
|
Short; 6 pages or less
|
Short; 6 pages or less
|
Short
|
CONTENT
|
Original research or experimentation.
Format:
title, abstract, literature review, methodology, discussion, conclusion, bibliography
|
Broad focus topics:culture, politics, etc.
|
News, trends, developments and products for industry or profession
|
Celebrity gossip, unusual news stories that may lack credibility
|
READERSHIP or AUDIENCE
|
Academics
Students
Professionals
|
Educated audience but non-specialists
|
Professionals and experts in the field
|
Gullible audience, appeal to superstitions and prejudice
|
AUTHOR
|
Specialists and researchers in a subject area
|
Staff or freelance writers who may have subject expertise
|
Professionals in the field, and/or staff writers
|
Often unidentified
|
VOCABULARY
|
Technical vocabulary and specialized jargon
|
Average level ranging from formal to conversational
|
Some specialized vocabulary but fairly readable
|
Elementary and inflammatory, popular language
|
ACCOUNTABILITY
|
Peer reviewed
Significant references
|
Not peer reviewed
Minimal references
|
Not peer reviewed
Minimal references
|
Not peer reviewed
Entirely unsubstantiated
|
ADVERTISEMENTS
|
Few or none
|
Moderate
|
Moderate (tend to be trade related)
|
Many
|
APPEARANCE
|
Plain, black/white graphics, charts and figures
|
Glossy w/ color with photographs and illustrations
|
Glossy w/ color with photographs and illustrations
|
Newspaper format, color with many photographs
|
EXAMPLES
|
The Journal of the American Medical Association
Journal of Sport and Social Issue
|
The Atlantic Monthly
Sports Illustrated
Time
Vogue
|
Advertising Age
American Teacher
Publishers Weekly
Supermarket News
|
National Examiner
Star
Weekly World News
|
This chart has been adapted from UC Santa Cruz's web page "Distinguish Between Popular and Scholarly Periodicals".
|