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Journal Articles

Journal Articles. Student: Alicia Avendaño Teacher: Mariana Mussetta Subject: English Language II. University: FRVM Date: 6 August 2011. What is a Journal?.

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Journal Articles

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  1. Journal Articles Student: Alicia Avendaño Teacher: Mariana Mussetta Subject: English Language II. University: FRVM Date: 6 August 2011

  2. What is a Journal? A journal is a scholarly publication containing articles written by researchers, professors, and other experts. Journals focus on a specific discipline or field of study. Unlike newspapers and magazines, journals are intended for an academic or technical audience, not general readers. (University of Victoria Libraries. Web)

  3. Characteristics Journals are published on a regular basis (monthly, quarterly, etc.) and are sequentially numbered. Each copy is an issue; a set of issues makes a volume (usually, each year is a separate volume). Like newspapers and magazines, journals are also called periodicals or serials. (University of Victoria Libraries. Web)

  4. Most Journal Articles... • Are peer reviewed. • Have original research. • Focus on current developments. • Cite other works and have bibliographies. • Can be in print, online, or both. (University of Victoria Libraries. Web)

  5. Journal articles are most often Primary Research Articles. However, they can also be Review Articles. Primary Research Articles These are articles in which the authors present a new set of findings from original research after conducting an experiment. (University of Toronto Libraries. Web) Review Articles These articles synthesize current research on a specific topic. (University of Toronto Libraries. Web)

  6. Abstract: Provides a complete overview of what the research is about, what it did, how it did it, what it found, and what those results mean. Introduction: Provides a brief review of previous research, a reason for the research, and an outline of exactly what it is that the research is aiming to do. Methods: Describe the methods used in the research. Results: Describe the results found. Discussion: Provides an interpretation of what the results actually mean in terms of the field and the original research question or hypothesis. Conclusion: Provides a forum for a holistic discussion of the meaning and implications of the research. It also details the implications of the research and makes recommendations about further research and practice in the relevant area. (Unilearning. Web) Its Parts

  7. Works Cited University of Victoria Libraries. 2011. Web. Unilearning. Web. University of Toronto Libraries. 2011. Web.

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