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HIST 300 : Introduction to Public History: Finding articles

Dr. Melissa Blair

How do I know if we have access to this journal title?

Found a good article? Now you need to know whether you can get the full text at the Priddy Library  

or at UMBC Library : Find Journals at UMBC

If you've run a database search, the article's record may have a "Full Text" or "PDF" link - that's great: click to get the full text. If not, click on any of these links to find out if we have access to the journal.

If you have found the article in Google Scholar: click a library link, e.g., "FindIt@UMCP" or  "FindIt@UMBC" to the right of the search result.

The article isn't available in our collection?

Did you find a relevant article for your research? Can't get access to the full text? Try to use the Document Delivery Illiad service, the librarians will be eager to find it for you and you will get the scan article in your mailbox.

Databases

Scholarly vs Popular

When conducting your research, it is important for you to distinguish between journal articles and magazine articles. Databases are used to find and identify articles from peer-reviewed journals and other types of documents.

Journal articles are usually referred to as "scholarly," while magazine articles are commonly considered "popular." Consider these points when differentiating between journals and magazines.

Criteria

Scholarly Journal

Popular Magazine

Audience

Academics/researchers and professionals

General public

Authors

Experts and/or specialists

Journalists and/or freelance writers

Editorial Review/Peer Review

Journal editorial board and peer reviewers.

Professional editors

References/ Works cited

Yes

Not necessary