Books, journals, newspapers, magazines
For your assignments, you'll typically consult and cite a mix of books, journals, newspapers and magazines. Knowing the difference will help you determine the most relevant and useful sources for your assignment.
Books |
Journals, newspapers and magazines |
In-depth and broad examination of a topic. | May be in-depth -- usually on a specific topic. |
Longer lag between an event or discovery and a book's publication. As a result...
|
Cover recent developments and events with little time lapse. As a result...
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Contain original research that may cover multiple experiments or span several years. | Journals contain original research and typically focus on one experiment; newspapers and magazines may refer to research studies, but do not contain original research. |
More cumulative coverage of a topic. | Limited coverage without much historical overview or context. |
Longer: 100 to several hundred pages. | Shorter: a few hundred words (newspaper articles) up to around 30 pages (journal articles). |
Published once, though revised editions may come out later. | Composed of volumes and issues published regularly. |
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