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Periodical is a term used to describe any publication that is published multiple times (periodically). Periodicals include materials such as popular magazines, scholarly journals, and newspapers.
It is important to understand the difference between a popular and a scholarly periodical. When you are doing research, most of your sources should be scholarly.
Often popular periodicals are called magazines and scholarly periodicals are called journals. Many times it will be acceptable to use some popular material, but research papers should not be based solely on popular literature.
Used with permission from Lili Kang, GateWay Community College. Based on Scholarly vs. Popular Materials by Amy VanScoy, NCSU Library and Scholarly, Popular and Trade Journals by Jason Puckett & Lyn Thaxton at GSU.
This short video (3:11) from the Peabody Library at Vanderbilt University explains the difference between these types of sources.
This video (3:52) from the Cook Library at Towson University shows how to tell the difference between a scholarly article and a popular one when looking in the library's subscription databases (like EBSCOhost).
This short video (1:46) from the Olin Library at Cornell University explains how to identify a scholarly article.