69 Academic Search Tools
Scholarly Content Online
There are some specialized search tools on the internet that target academic audiences. Perhaps the most popular one is Google Scholar, which looks for academic, scholarly content. Another tool is Microsoft Academic Search. There are also a few subject-specific search tools that you might want to become familiar with, such as PubMed (for the biomedical field) or ERIC (for the education field).
Paywalls
Typically, you would find scholarly content using a library database, but the tools described above can also help connect you to scholarly content through which your college subscribes. The problem—especially for community college students—is that these tools also find a lot of resources to which your college might not have a subscription.
For this reason, a lot of the content these search tools will find is behind something called a paywall. A paywall is a barrier you may encounter online, when you have to pay before you can access a resource. Scholarly journal articles you find online come with a price, which can range anywhere from $25 per article up to well over $100 per article!
In our scenario, you have to find 10 resources. That means, for this class assignment, it might cost you anywhere from $250 to over $1000 to complete. At this point, you might be thinking that these academic search tools are not worth using, and we wouldn’t blame you. But these tools don’t always lead you to a paywall, and a paywall is not always a dead end. These tools can help you identify resources that might also be available for free in a database from your college’s library, and these tools will often connect you to open access resources.
Concept Review Exercise: Academic or Scholarly Content
Sources
This section includes material from the source book, Introduction to College Research, as well as the following:
Image: “Lock” by Those Icons, adapted by Aloha Sargent, from Flaticon.com
Original material by book author Sarah Burkhead Whittle.