A general database like Academic Search Premier is a great place to start your research. Find more specific databases for your program using the tabs below.
These databases are recommended for students in the following programs:
Audio in Media Arts
Sound Recording and Engineering
These databases are recommended for students in the following programs:
Advertising and Marketing
Journalism
Media Studies
Public Relations
Scriptwriting
Sports Communication
SPORTDiscus is the leading bibliographic database for sports and sports medicine research. It includes records from leading sports medicine journals, books, dissertations and more.
These databases are recommended for students in the following programs:
Animation
Film, Television, and Video Production
Film Studies
Games and Game Design
Interactive Digital Media
Media Production
Photography
Google Scholar is a simple tool to search for scholarly (peer-reviewed) articles, and see how many times an article has been cited in other research. And when you hit a paywall, it can connect to Webster University Library's resources. If you are using a computer with an off-campus IP address, follow these instructions to connect Google Scholar to library resources:
Scholarly articles are sometimes "peer-reviewed" or "refereed" because they are evaluated by other scholars or experts in the field before being accepted for publication. A scholarly article is commonly an experimental or research study, or an in-depth theoretical or literature review. It is usually many more pages than a magazine article.
The clearest and most reliable indicator of a scholarly article is the presence of references or citations. Look for a list of works cited, a reference list, and/or numbered footnotes or endnotes. Citations are not merely a check against plagiarism. They set the article in the context of a scholarly discussion and provide useful suggestions for further research.
Many of our databases allow you to limit your search to just scholarly articles. This is a useful feature, but it is not 100% accurate in terms of what it includes and what it excludes. You should still check to see if the article has references or citations.
The table below compares some of the differences between magazines (e.g. Psychology Today) and journals (e.g Journal of Abnormal Psychology).
Popular magazines | Scholarly journals | |
---|---|---|
Reference list, citations | no | yes |
Appearance | flashy cover, photographs, advertisements | mostly text, often graphs and charts of data, few ads |
Titles | short and catchy | long and precise |
Article length | short | long |
Audience | general public | students, professionals, researchers |
Authors | staff writers, journalists | practitioners, theorists, educators |
Peer-review | no | yes |
Publisher | commercial company | educational institution or professional organization |