Navigating the internet for unbiased, unadulterated facts about a controversial research topic is seemingly impossible. In many cases, the sources, online magazines, and blogs contain politically aligned prejudices regarding the material at hand or ill-informed points of view, making research a nightmare. This is where scholarly articles can make a world of difference. Scholarly articles are articles from institutions such as universities or companies, written by experienced people with the credentials in the subject matter at hand; they’re usually unbiased and to the point. This is extremely helpful when looking closer at a broad, controversial topic such as sexism in, and surrounding …show more content…
These sources will explain that there is sexism in the athletic industry and will provide a few examples of who and where the sexism is coming from. However, they leave out a large portion of details from the article. Often making the article more of a story first and facts and statistics second. These articles often begin a point and then barely scrape the surface of what they want to talk about. For instance, a number of articles say broad terms such as, “sports are sexist” and, “men are payed more in the athletic world” without going any farther than that. There is often no more than one example in each article about a single sexist event that happened at a single game which obviously should not happen, but is still not enough to state that an institution as a whole is sexist. Other articles couldn’t even stay on track about what it was they wanted to touch on, leaving large, awkward holes in it. Some would start off by saying, “sports are sexist” and would then go into a diluted spiral, briefly touching on many subjects that didn’t have much to do with the topic, instead of the large, important …show more content…
One of the biggest differences between the two information sources is that popular news articles are reviewed by an editor, while scholarly sources go through a peer review process and are critically examined by people with the necessary credentials to do so. This should be evidence enough that popular sources are not good sources to compile a proper research paper on. Journals and popular articles are often written by journalists too, which means they are experts in writing, not at experts on the source at hand. Whereas scholarly articles are written by experts in the presented topic. It’s important to ask questions when reading a popular article because they often use “click-bait” tactics to draw readers in. Whether it be taking quotes out of context to further push a point, or brandishing an article with a misleading title in order to gain more attention to the written piece. Scholarly articles don’t use these metaphorical lights and cameras to make the subject matter more appealing. Instead, they’re blatantly honest and used to convey information to a much smaller