Finding Your Field
Finding key journals
There are many academic
journals, ranging from widely read “flagship” journals to specialized journals.
You can try some of the following methods to locate the journals that are
shaping your field.
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If journal articles are commonly assigned as reading in your
coursework, identify which journals publish more of the articles you enjoyed
most or felt were most relevant to your research interests.
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Speak with multiple instructors in your department about the journals they
read. They likely have a set few that they follow and may even have a list
to share with you.
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Use the UNC Libraries’ Subject
Research Guide. After you locate the guide for your field, go to the
recommended databases. Enter search terms that reflect your interests into
each database. For help crafting a search query, you can consult sources
like Modern
Librarian Memoirs or the Medical
College of Wisconsin Libraries.
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Note the titles of journals that appear frequently across the results from
your initial searches. For best results, filter your results to just
academic journals. The journals that reoccur may well be the flagship
journals for you.
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Schedule a research
consultation with a subject specialist through the UNC
libraries. These experts can help you with class projects, research
projects, and pursuing personal interests. They can also help orient you to
the available resources and answer questions that have come up on your
search. Take advantage of this amazing resource. The librarians love to help
you!
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Set up journal alerts to see what’s happening in the current conversations.
You can set up automatic notifications for new issues of your disciplinary
journals and many other things. Skim the titles to see what people are
interested in, and read as you can. See this Current
Awareness Guide from the UNC Health Sciences Library for
options and procedures.
Mining the journals
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Skim the table of contents for each issue of each journal dating back for as
many back issues as you have time for. Don’t click on anything—just skim to
titles to survey the kinds of topics that people in your field have been
reading and writing about recently. What topic trends do you notice?
Identify buzzwords, phrases, and approaches that repeatedly appear in one
journal, or appear across multiple journals.
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Notice the names of scholars who appear frequently across your selected
journals, or who appear when scanning for your interests. You can widen the
net if you’d like to. When you search these scholars’ names, are there other
publication venues that come up? Related topics that you could learn more
about?
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Notice the citation information that many journals publish with the article
titles, like how many times the article has been cited by other
publications. The number of citations indicates the article’s impact on the
field. Most journals publish a list of the most-viewed and most-cited
articles they have published. See an example from the Quarterly
Journal of Speech by scrolling to the bottom of the page.
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Learn the vocabulary. Click on a few articles that look interesting to you
and notice the keywords and the subject terms that are included in the
result page. Keywords are supplied by authors and can show how people in the
field refer to the same thing with different words (e.g., in applied
linguistics, “second language writing” or “L2 writing”). Noticing keywords
helps you become conversant in your discipline’s language. Subject terms are
category labels, the overarching terms assigned by the database editors. See
this detailed description of keyword
vs subject searches for more details.
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Note your interests. As you read, pay attention to what piques your interest
for further study. These topics may have potential for your own work.
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Build a reading list on topics of interest and include the most-cited
articles in that area. Use a citation manager. Citation managers are tools
that allow you to collect, organize, and annotate articles for future
use—and more. See the UNC Health Sciences Library citation
manager comparison tool to learn more about everything they
can do to make your life easier!
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Build a synthesis
matrix. Build a spreadsheet that allows you to look at
information across multiple articles to compare information from various
voices in the conversation. The categories you develop should emerge from
the kind of articles you find. See example matrices on Autism, Culturally
Responsive Pedagogy, and Translingualism.
Mining the bibliographies
The bibliography at the end of every scholarly work is a map of the intellectual
influences on that work. Reading the bibliography can help you discover which
articles are key texts in your field, which other disciplines get cited in your
field, and even obscure but fascinating articles you wouldn’t otherwise
encounter.
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When you encounter interesting articles, either from your courses or from
your own searching, look carefully at their bibliographies. What do you
notice? Is there an article that appears in several bibliographies? If it’s
widely cited, it may be important for you to find it and read it yourself.
Are there authors who appear repeatedly? If they’re important figures in the
areas you’re interested in, search for more work by these scholars. Pay
attention to publication dates to see how their work has evolved over time.
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Notice the range of disciplines that appear in the bibliographies in your
field. Try to open your mind to the interdisciplinary possibilities for your
own research interests. Investigate areas you’re curious about by skimming a
few of those journals.
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Let it marinate. Find ways to review and articulate what you’re learning.
Talk to people about what you’re learning to make that learning more
complete.
Entering the conversation
Even when you’re in the early stages of grad school, you can begin to imagine
how you’ll eventually contribute to the unending conversation of your
discipline. As your expertise grows, you’ll be able to respond thoughtfully to
other voices in the field. You can begin to develop a sense of your discipline’s
publication process now. Here are some ways to identify and get a feel for how
to start connecting your work with the places where conversations happen in your
field.
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Each journal has a page called “information for authors.” What kinds of
information can you find on the information pages of several different
journals?
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Each journal has an editor, as well as an editorial board. Identify the
current editor, and search the journal to see if you can locate an Editor’s
Statement. What kinds of information can you learn from several different
statements? What resonates with you?
Each of the above tasks can be iterated over time as a strategy for continual
engagement with your field. If any of these strategies works best for how you
read and learn, try doing it on a regular basis. Welcome to the conversation!
Works consulted
We consulted these works while writing this handout. This is not a comprehensive
list of resources on the handout’s topic, and we encourage you to do your own
research to find additional publications. Please do not use this list as a model
for the format of your own reference list, as it may not match the citation
style you are using. For guidance on formatting citations, please see the UNC
Libraries citation tutorial. We revise these tips periodically and welcome
feedback.
Graff, Gerald and Cathy Birkenstein. They
Say / I Say: The Moves that Matter in Academic Writing, 4th ed. New York
City: W. W. Norton, 2018.
Swales, John M. and Christine B. Feak. Academic
Writing for Graduate Students, 3rd ed. Ann Arbor, University of Michigan
Press, 2012.