While not all scholarly articles are peer-reviewed, many journals do have a peer review process in which other researchers go over a paper as a form of quality control before publication.
The following video provides a brief overview of the peer review process.
"Peer Review in 3 Minutes" (3:15) by NCSU Libraries is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 US)
The list below describes the components of scholarly journal articles in the Sciences and Social Sciences. The majority of articles in these disciplines will have the sections listed below.
Scholarly journal articles in the Arts and Humanities are set up differently than in the Sciences and Social Sciences. Articles may read more like essays, rather than reports on scientific experiments. In the humanities, scholars are not conducting experiments on participants but rather are making logical arguments based on the evidence they have researched and analyzed.
In literature, for example, a scholar may be studying a particular novel of an author. In history, a scholar may look at the primary source documents from the time period they are studying.
The following sections are generally included in humanities scholarly articles, although they may not be clearly marked or labeled.
Because scholarly articles are much longer than other types of articles, it's important that you learn a strategy for determining if an article is relevant to your research before you commit to reading it in full.
The following video shares a strategy for how to initially approach reading a scholarly article.
"How to Quickly Scan & Evaluate a Scholarly Article" (3:12) by QVCC Library is licensed under CC BY 3.0