Information from newspaper, magazine and journal articles are more specific than background information and can help support your arguments. Scholarly or peer-reviewed articles are often required for academic journals and college-level research. These articles are found using subscription library databases. Moorpark College Library subscribes to databases so they are free and available to you.
Here, you're not only looking for scholarly journals, but for journals in which a panel of of experts/peers in the field reviews articles to decide whether they should be accepted for publication. Articles selected by this process are considered "peer-reviewed," or "refereed."
Note: Remember that editorial opinion pieces, book reviews, news articles are not peer-reviewed pieces even if they are a part of a peer-reviewed journal. Be sure to carefully evaluate each article.
Use a peer-reviewed journal to:
Difference between scholarly journals and popular magazines
| Scholarly | Popular & General Interest | |
| General Appearance | Serious appearance; may contain graphs, charts, statistics, few pictures, known as "Peer-Reviewed" or "Refereed" or "Academic" | Attractive in appearance, heavily illustrated with photos and ads | 
| Writers of Articles | Articles written by scholars and researchers in the field. Before publication, articles are reviewed and approved by subject specialists | Usually free-lance or staff writers | 
| Audience | College students, faculty, scholars, or researchers | General public | 
| Purpose | To report on original research or experimentation | To provide information, news or to entertain the reader; also may be aimed to sell products or promote a particular point of view | 
| Documentation | Always cites sources and may include endnotes or a Works Cited page | Sometimes cite their sources | 
| Publisher | Often a university, a research institution, or a professional organization | Commercial enterprises or individuals | 
| Examples | Journal of Marriage and Family, American Historical Review, Social Problems, New England Journal of Medicine | Ebony, Men's Journal, Good Housekeeping, People, Sports Illustrated, | 
|  |  | 
| Primary Information | Secondary Information | Tertiary Information | 
| Primary sources of information are first-hand observations or experiences of an event when it happened. There can be competing opinions from different sources about the same event. | Secondary sources are created after an event happened. They can include a review or an analysis of the event. | Tertiary sources are compilations of information and can contain lists or collections for locating secondary and primary sources. | 
| Examples: Photographs, letters, diaries, speeches, autobiographies, and newspaper articles | Example: Books, journals | Example: Abstracts, almanacs, bibliographies, dictionaries, directories, fact books, guidebooks, indexes, manuals, and textbooks |