Types of research
Most research uses one of the following forms of data collection: observation, questionnaires, interviews, or controlled experiments. Types of research include case studies, user studies, experimental research, and survey research. This research is captured in the form of published journal article, usually in a scholarly or peer-reviewed journal, not in popular journals or magazines.
Scholarly vs. Peer Reviewed Journals
A publication is considered to be scholarly if it is authored by academics for a target audience that is mainly academic, the printed format isn't usually a glossy magazine, and it is published by a recognized society with academic goals and missions. A publication is considered to be peer reviewed if its articles go through an official editorial process that involves review and approval by the author's peers (people who are experts in the same subject area.) Most (but not all) scholarly publications are peer reviewed.
Identifying Peer Reviewed Journals (also called refereed)
Sources:
Finding Research Articles and Refereed Journals Tutorial Summary of Main Points. (n.d.) Finding Research Articles and Refereed Journals. Retrieved November 5, 2007 from University Library, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (http://www.library.uiuc.edu) Link no longer available.
Section 3: Identifying Research Articles and Refereed Journals. (n.d.) Finding Research Articles and Refereed Journals. Retrieved November 5, 2007 from University Library, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (http://www.library.uiuc.edu) Link no longer available.