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Nursing Resources: Find Articles

Articles are an excellent source for

  • Current information and news

  • Commentary and opinion

  • general and/or specific information

  • Scholarly research

 

Each article type has its strengths and weaknesses depending on your information need. 

When searching in a database or using the discovery tool, a variety of articles will be in the results list. Review each article to confirm it is the best article for your project.

Article Type

Description

Magazine

Magazine articles are written for the general public. They are designed to sell copies with lots of pictures and advertisements. The authors of magazine articles are often journalists or staff writers. These writers are often generalists. The articles are brief and rarely contain citations. While there may be information about your topic in a magazine, it will not be as in-depth or as technical as you may need for an academic project. However, magazines are great for getting information on current topics as they are published frequently.

Examples of magazines include:

  • Time

  • Parents

  • National Geographic

  • Wired

Newspaper

Information in newspapers is written for the general public. Most newspapers are published daily covering the events of the recent past or upcoming events. Newspapers often focus their news and information for a specific audience in a specific area.  The authors of newspaper articles are often journalists or staff writers. The articles are brief and rarely contain citations. These articles discuss news and interest stories. While there may be information about your topic in a newspaper article, it will not be as in-depth or as technical as you may need for an academic project.

Examples of newspapers include:

  • Peoria Journal Star

  • New York Times

  • Chicago Tribune

  • Wall Street Journal

Trade publication

Trade publications are journals written for a specific industry or profession. They are designed to keep people in a trade up-to-date on industry developments. The authors are usually staff writers or journalists, often with experience in the field. The articles are brief and rarely contain citations. Trade publications include lots of graphics and advertisements.

Examples include:

  • Advertising Age

  • Scientific American

  • Accounting Today

  • Chemical Week

Academic Journal

Academic journal articles are written by scholars for scholars in an academic or professional field. These articles go through a peer-review process to decide whether they should be published. Academic journal articles are very specific or cover a narrow topic. These articles always contain citations and usually have extensive references listed (which are helpful in finding other articles on the topic). Academic journal articles are usually several pages long. Many academic articles follow the format of introduction, methods, results, and conclusion.  Academic journals usually do not contain ads. The title often includes the words "journal of" and also includes a specific topic.

Examples of academic journals include:

  • Journal of Nursing Research

  • Journal of Nursing Scholarship

  • Journal of Interprofessional Education & Practice

Other

There are other publications including editorials, conference proceedings, technical reports, abstracts, etc. that do not fall into these general article categories. Always review the article and determine if the article should be used for your project.  If you are not sure, ask a librarian.

 

Steps for reading a scholarly article.

Scholarly article reading is very different from leisure reading. Follow these steps to take the mystery out of article reading.

Do not be a passive reader.  Actively read articles by engaging the information.

Before/during reading ask yourself about:

  • authorship
    • Who is the author? What is the journal the article is from? Are they credible?
  • terminology
    • What does that word mean? (Look it up! Use a dictionary to help understand unfamiliar words.)
  • your understanding 
    • Do I understand what the author is saying?  What is still confusing?

After reading ask yourself:

  • What is the research question for the paper?  Why is it important?
  • Did the author(s) use good methodology?
  • What are the findings? Why do they matter?
  • Was supporting evidence used?  Was it persuasive?
  • Did the author miss anything? Is there a different explanation?
  • Is further research needed?
  • How does this relate to the other articles I am reading on this subject?

Adapted from: Purugganan, Mary, and Jan Hewitt. "How to read a scientific article." Rice University (2004).

Skim the article and identify its structure.

Again, do not read the article like a book.  Begin by looking the article over and identifying the sections.

Most scholarly journals articles follow a pattern. You can expect this patten in almost every scholarly article you read.

  • Abstract
    • The abstract is a short summary of the article. Read the abstract first.  Reading the abstract will save you time and effort because you will be able to identify if the article will help you with your research in a single paragraph. The abstract is the readers glimpse into the main ideas of the article.  
    • Do not cite the abstract in your paper, your citations should come directly from the text.
  • Introduction
    • The introduction puts forward the research question that the article attempts to answer.
    • Introductions provide background information for the reader so that they can better understand the article.  Introductions also serve to capture the interest of the reader in the topic(s) to be discussed.
  • Methods
    • In the methods section, the authors explain their methodology for the experiment or research based on the research question. This includes the design of the experiment in detail. The method section often uses technical language that may be difficult to understand.   
  • Results 
    • The result section provides what the authors found out by doing the experiment or research.
  • Discussion
    • The discussion section puts the results into the larger context of the work. Here the authors discuss how their findings compare to other findings. The answer to the research question is found in the discussion section.
  • Conclusion
    • The conclusion states what it all means
  • References
    • The authors list all the works that they used to to preform the experiment or research and to write the article. These works are listed by a citation format usually MLA, APA, or another format that your professor supplies.
    • You can use the references listed to find more sources for your own research.

 

Follow this tutorial from Purdue University on why and how to read scientific articles https://www.lib.purdue.edu/help/tutorials/scientific-paper

 Parts adapted from: Purugganan, Mary, and Jan Hewitt. "How to read a scientific article." Rice University (2004).

Take notes as you read.

Note taking improves recall and comprehension. Develop a way to take notes and organize your thoughts.

Take notes on:

  • The complete citation for the article
  • If accessed through the web the URL and date accessed
  • Keywords from the article
  • General and specific subjects covered
  • Hypothesis/thesis for the article
  • Methodology
  • Result(s)
  • Discussion/context
  • Summary of key points
  • How it relates to other sources from your research
  • Cited references to follow up on 

Adapted from: Purugganan, Mary, and Jan Hewitt. "How to read a scientific article." Rice University (2004).

Identify the main points in the paper.

Look at the headings and sub-headings as they help you determine what are the main points (headings) and subordinate points (sub-headings) in the paper.

Look for keywords and phrases.  Words like "we propose," "I intend," "the data suggests," etc.  Phrases like these indicate that something important is about to follow.

Adapted from: Purugganan, Mary, and Jan Hewitt. "How to read a scientific article." Rice University (2004).

Make evidence-based assumptions.

Rely on what you already know and have experienced to draw inferences from the material. Make observations as you read. Use: Who? What? When? Where? Why? and How? to guide your observations. Connect your observations to make an inference.

Adapted from: Purugganan, Mary, and Jan Hewitt. "How to read a scientific article." Rice University (2004).

Ask for assistance, if needed.

If you are having trouble understanding an article, ask for help from your instructor, your classmate, a tutor or a librarian.

From off-campus, you will need to log in using your Methodist College login and password. See the instructions at https://library.methodistcol.edu/resources/campus-access

If you need help, please contact the library at 309-671-2940

 

Journal articles are found by searching in the library's databases.

 

These are the best databases at Methodist College to find articles on nursing topics.

American Nurses Association Publications

ANA

The Methodist College Library has access to over 650 e-journals on the topic of Nursing and Allied Health.  

Keyword Searching and Boolean Operators

Choosing the right keywords is essential to getting the best search result which leads to the high-quality, on-topic sources you need. Learn how to generate useful keywords and search in library databases with the video below.

Use Boolean Operators to combine your search terms. Watch this video below on Boolean operators.

 

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