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Physical Therapist Assistant

Use this guide to help you research information using the WCC Bailey Library resources.

What is an article? Why use a journal article?

An article is defined as a piece of writing shorter than a book, appearing in a newspaper, magazine, periodical, journal, or anthology.  To be scholarly, an article must be based on research and include documentation of all sources.

  • articles present the most recent published literature on any topic
  • articles are published in periodicals

Why use a journal article? Use journal articles because they contain:

  • when you need original research on a topic
  • specialized information, not available elsewhere
  • factual documented information to reinforce a position
  • articles and essays written by scholars or subject experts
  • references lists that point you to other relevant research

What is a Scholarly / Peer-Reviewed Article?

Characteristics of scholarly or peer-reviewed articles often:   Cover images of journals

  • are written by experts in the subject field. They are authorities in that field of study. Authors are highly educated.
  • go through a peer-review process. This is the process where the article is read by recognized researchers in the field and recommend the article for publication in the journal. They look for errors in the article/research.
  • are usually reports on scholarly research or case studies.
  • cite their sources at the end of the article in the Reference section. 
  • are published monthly, quarterly, bi-annually or annually.
  • are geared toward scholars, researchers, professionals and college students.


Some examples of scholarly or peer-reviewed journals:     

  • American Journal of Psychology
  • JAMA: Journal of the American Medical Association
  • Journal of Physical Therapy Education

Popular Magazine Articles often:  

  • are written by journalists.
  • are intended to be read by the general public
  • use language understood by most readers
  • rarely include citations for their sources
  • are shorter and general in focus
  • have a lot of advertising.

Some examples of popular magazines:

  • Forbes
  • Popular Science
  • Time Magazine

Peer-Review Process

What is a peer-reviewed article?

Peer review is the system used to assess the quality of a manuscript before it is published. Independent researchers in the relevant research area assess submitted manuscripts for originality, validity and significance to help editors determine whether a manuscript should be published in their journal.

Source: BioMedCentral. (n/a). Peer review process. https://www.biomedcentral.com/getpublished/peer-review-process

Peer-review process for publication in a journal:

Source: Scientific Forefront Journal. (n/a). Publication process. http://www.scientificforefront.org/publicationprocess.php

Structure of a Peer-Reviewed Article

Once you identify a great article, look for the following

  • An abstract at the beginning of the article -- summary of the researchers/authors argument, approach and conclusion
  • Author(s) -- scholarly articles usually have two or more authors -- author credentials and affiliations are listed on first page or last page of article
  • Specialized Headings/Sections in the article -- include:
    • Introduction -- One to several paragraphs describing the subject content of the article. Sometimes this section is called Background. This section usually includes the literature review of previous studies related to the same topic.
    • Methodology --  This section will provide information about what data was collected and who participated in the study.
    • Results -- This section will provide information about the results of the study.
    • Discussion - The purpose of the discussion is to interpret and describe the significance of research study and provide any new insights from the research.
    • Conclusion -- this section will provide the findings of the research and any recommendations and limitations of the study.
    • References or bibliography -- an extensive list of references used in the research of the article is provided at the end of the article.

Note: The structure and format of peer-reviewed scientific manuscripts (articles) are changing. You might find peer-reviewed articles without a separate literature review and conclusion sections. These sections will be part of the introduction and discussion sections. 

How to Read a Scholarly Article

From the University of Minnesota Libraries

How to Read a Scholarly (Peer-Reviewed) Article

1. Read the abstract

An abstract is a summary of the article, and will give you an idea of what the article is about and how it will be written. If there are lots of complicated subject-specific words in the abstract, the article will be just as hard to read.

2. Read the discussion / conclusion - Many articles do not include a section header for conclusion - Go to discussion 

This is where the author will repeat all of their ideas and their findings. Some authors even use this section to compare their study to others. By reading this, you will notice a few things you missed, and will get another overview of the content.

3. The rest of the article

Now that you have gathered the idea of the article through the abstract, conclusion, introduction, and topic sentences, you can read the rest of the article!

To review: Abstract → Conclusion (and Discussion) → Entire Article

Know the Science