How do
I know if it is a...
Web Source or Journal Article?
Lederer, Naomi. "Is it Information
on the Web or a Journal/Magazine Article? A Web Guideline for Teachers."
Academic Exchange Quarterly 3.3 (Fall 1999): 67-69.
Many students may be confused about what is from
the web and what uses web technology. For example, some students come
to our library with directions that they may only use two or three web
sources for their research papers. This in itself is not bad - it is even
admirable. However, because web technology provides access to reputable
publishers' indexes and journals, students may get confused about the
differences between using software designed for use through the web, and
looking at sources on the web. Our library has access to the entire World
Wide Web, and also has paid for access to hundreds of indexes (some with
full texts of selected articles) and full-text journals that are reached
through the web interface. In addition, our library has links to scholarly
journals that provide free access to their articles. These full text articles
are not generic "web sources"; they just happen to be available
through the technology of the web.
Students, with strict instructions about what materials
they may use for their projects, sometimes find themselves in a quandary.
They have been told not to rely on the web, but the indexes the librarian
recommends to them are more and more frequently appearing to be on the
web (which they are, but . . .). Sometimes students need to be convinced
that it is "OK" to use these sources because what they are using
is a published index (electronically available on the web), subscribed
to by the library, that just happens to have the full texts of some or
all of its articles. These are not random web sources or search engine
created categories. In some instances librarians are able to assure the
students that articles have a print equivalent, so they are not "web"
sources. The "it is available in print" argument is not true
for all scholarly sources, so that explanation slants the truth a bit
because there are a growing number of scholarly journals that are published
solely in electronic format; it does, however, simplify the librarian's
explanation.
TELLING THE DIFFERENCE:
Teachers are encouraged to continue to limit the
number of web sources (depending on the topic), but should explain to
their students the difference between sources "published" on
the web and journal articles that just happen to be electronically available
(through an index or directly from a journal publisher's web site). Describing
the differences in class and designing an activity or activities that
give the students a chance to actually see examples, will help them determine
which sources are which.
For example: Journal of Extension <http://www.joe.org/>
, beginning with v. 32, no. 1 (June 1994), is an electronic-only journal.
It has an ISSN number and is peer-reviewed (scholarly). It has electronic
access to back issues beginning with Fall 1987. The home page identifies
the organization affiliated with the Journal of Extension and has instructions
for authors. The articles found here are scholarly journal articles.
A magazine that publishes a print version, Time,
has at <http://Time.com/> (automatically
hyperlinks to <http://cgi.pathfinder.com/time/>
) web-only news, articles from an identified issue of the magazine, a
way to search their site, an archive (with a view issues by cover option),
links to the publisher's other magazine's web sites, and, on every page,
electronic "no postage" subscription cards. In addition, there
are electronic advertisements from other companies. With the possible
exception of "Today's News," The articles found here are
magazine articles.
In contrast, there are articles expressing opinions
on a Miningco.com's Society and Culture page <http://home.miningco.com/culture/>
. There are links to essays on many topics that don't have clear "answers"
or at any rate, don't have clear agreement as to what the answers should
be. These essays, some with links to other pages on the web, have been
selected by named "guides." Guides are self-selected; there
is a "Be a Guide" link on every page along with Miningco.com's
copyright statement. In other words, an essay may be extremely useful
(or not), but articles found here would not qualify as a published
journal or magazine article. These are "web" sources of information.
EDUCATIONAL AND GOVERNMENTAL SITES:
Things can be murky when it comes to educational
and governmental sites. Many scholars have created valuable web sites
with useful and reliable information, but these sites are not currently
considered published articles. The US Government now publishes a large
percentage of its sources on the web; these sources are "official"--but
may or may not qualify as published articles.
For example: Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report
(MMWR) <http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/>
is a government publication. Articles located on this site (from 1993
through the present), are respectable US Government articles.
The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Internet
site <http://www.fda.gov/> , has
many kinds of information of interest to consumers - press releases, materials
from various centers (e.g. Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition),
etc. From this site it is possible to search FDA Consumer, a magazine
to which individuals may subscribe (and frequently found in libraries).
From the FDA Search page articles can be looked for by topic from the
magazine; these are US Government articles. However, the default search
is all of the site, which includes FDA Consumer articles, but also pulls
up Federal Register entries, bibliographies (and parts of long bibliographies),
transcripts of meetings, etc. Many of these are useful research sources,
but they are not "journal articles."
A FINAL THOUGHT FOR TEACHERS:
As a librarian, I tell students that the final
arbitrator is the person grading the assignment. By clarifying and showing
examples of what is acceptable in class, a teacher gives students the
essential information that they need to know to complete their research
projects. However, teachers (at all levels K-16) will need to clarify
in their own minds the differences between "web sources" and
"published articles retrieved off the web" before explaining
them to their students. I hope this article will help.
Thanks to Naomi Lederer at Colorado State University Library for her
permission to share this article in its entirety. Retrieved from http://lib.colostate.edu/howto/isitwebart.html
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