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What kind of source is JSTOR Daily?

JSTOR provides access to more than 12 million journal articles, books, images, and primary sources in 75 disciplines. We help you explore a wide range of scholarly content through a powerful research and teaching platform.
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What type of sources are JSTOR?

Primary source collections currently available on JSTOR are multidisciplinary and discipline-specific and include select monographs, pamphlets, manuscripts, letters, oral histories, government documents, images, 3D models, spatial data, type specimens, drawings, paintings, and more.
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Is JSTOR Daily a primary source?

JSTOR Daily, our free online magazine, provides highlights of Primary Sources, Open Community Collections, and Artstor Public Collections on JSTOR, helping instructors and researchers to begin exploring and engaging with content in these collections.
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Is JSTOR Daily peer-reviewed?

We also showcase regular columns by subject-matter experts writing for a popular audience. In general, we like stories that are thought-provoking, reader-friendly, unique, and—most importantly—backed by academic integrity and peer review.
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Is JSTOR Daily a database?

JSTOR content is provided by more than 900 publishers. The database contains more than 12 million journal articles, in more than 75 disciplines.
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Primary Sources in JSTOR Daily

Is JSTOR a credible source?

A trusted, highly used source

JSTOR is a starting point for researchers and one of the most trusted, highly used platforms.
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Is JSTOR considered a scholarly source?

However, all content on JSTOR is considered scholarly content. In the following section we'll look at the peer review process, the definition of scholarly content, and how that relates to content on JSTOR.
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Does JSTOR have secondary sources?

A secondary source is an account written after the event which interprets and evaluates primary sources (about the event.) They are commentary on what happened rather than records. Most journals and books on JSTOR, including the content covered in the subject sections of this guide, will be secondary sources.
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What does JSTOR Daily stand for?

JSTOR Daily publishes new stories daily on historical and news-related topics. All of the stories feature research from the digital library and database JSTOR (which stands for "journal storage").
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What are 3 examples of primary sources?

Examples of primary resources include:
  • diaries, correspondence, ships' logs.
  • original documents e.g. birth certificates, trial transcripts.
  • biographies, autobiographies, manuscripts.
  • interviews, speeches, oral histories.
  • case law, legislation, regulations, constitutions.
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What are the advantages of JSTOR?

Key benefits

Quality: JSTOR collections are curated, and all journals must meet specific criteria and undergo a review process in order to join JSTOR. This includes journal rankings, in depth examination of research and citation data, and more. Coverage: All journals include the full archival run.
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What counts as scholarly sources?

Scholarly sources are written by academics and other experts and contribute to knowledge in a particular field by sharing new research findings, theories, analyses, insights, news, or summaries of current knowledge. Scholarly sources can be either primary or secondary research.
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Can high school students use JSTOR?

Learning to use JSTOR during high school gives students added confidence and prepares them for the rigors of college research, while enabling teachers to incorporate important scholarly content into their classes. JSTOR also provides an easy-to-use platform with a suite of tools for research and study.
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Can you copy and paste from JSTOR?

You can copy and paste text from your own article or document or paste in a URL. Don't worry, we'll keep your document private.
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How do you cite JSTOR?

When searching on JSTOR, you can also create one or more citations directly from the search results page. To cite a single item, click the Cite button next to the item. For images, this is under a drop-down menu which you can open by clicking the three vertical dots next to the image thumbnail.
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Do you have to cite JSTOR?

JSTOR is an online database for scholarly article. Its articles are available online and hence you have to cite them as online database, with DOI.
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Who pays for JSTOR?

JSTOR offers tiered fees and flexible purchasing options for libraries and organizations. We adjust our fees based on your institution's size, type, and country. Participants include small institutions, large universities, secondary schools, and every type in between.
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How do you tell if a source is scholarly or non scholarly?

The following characteristics can help you determine if the article you're looking at is scholarly:
  1. Author(s) name included. ...
  2. Technical or specialized language. ...
  3. Written for professionals. ...
  4. Charts, graphs, and diagrams. ...
  5. Long (5 or more pages) ...
  6. Bibliography included.
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How do you know if a source is credible?

That criteria are as follows:
  1. Authority: Who is the author? What are their credentials? ...
  2. Accuracy: Compare the author's information to that which you already know is reliable. ...
  3. Coverage: Is the information relevant to your topic and does it meet your needs? ...
  4. Currency: Is your topic constantly evolving?
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What isn't a scholarly source?

Newspapers are not scholarly sources, but some would not properly be termed popular, either. Every source must be questioned for its stake in the material. The New York Post is notoriously inflammatory, for instance, and also seems to love television shows broadcast on the Fox network (owned by the same company).
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What are the cons of JSTOR?

Cons: JSTOR searches the full text of every article, so you may find items that mention your search terms only once (your search terms may not be the main focus of the article)
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Who uses JSTOR?

Used in more than 13,000 schools, universities, and institutions around the world, the collections in JSTOR include peer-reviewed scholarly journals, respected literary journals, academic monographs, research reports, and primary sources from libraries' special collections and archives.
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What are the 5 primary sources?

Examples of primary sources: Diaries, letters, memoirs, autobiographies. Interviews, speeches, oral histories, personal narratives. Scientific data and reports.
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What are the 4 types of primary sources?

There are many kinds of primary sources including texts (letters, diaries, government reports, newspaper accounts, novels, autobiographies), images (photographs, paintings, advertisements, posters), artifacts (buildings, clothing, sculpture, coins) and audio/visual (songs, oral history interviews, films).
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What are the 8 secondary sources?

Secondary Sources
  • Monographs.
  • Journal articles.
  • Biography.
  • Encyclopedias.
  • Dissertations.
  • Research analysis.
  • Works of criticism and interpretation.
  • Newspaper articles (analyzing news)
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