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What is Journal?

A journal, in academic contexts, refers to a peer-reviewed publication in which researchers present original studies, reviews, and analyses across virtually every field of inquiry. Students encounter journal articles in courses ranging from nursing and public health to ethics, education, history, and social sciences. Working with journals teaches critical reading skills, because published research demands that readers evaluate methodology, assess the credibility of findings, and understand how authors position their arguments within broader scholarly conversations. The ability to locate, interpret, and respond to journal sources is foundational to undergraduate and graduate academic work.

The papers collected here reflect a wide range of approaches to engaging with journal sources. Many take a review or synthesis format, summarizing findings and implications from multiple articles on topics such as bilingual education, high school dropout rates among Native Americans, father absence and adolescent drug use, and oral health. Others focus on a single article or study, analyzing how researchers frame their data and what their conclusions support. Some papers extend into annotated bibliography form, evaluating sources on subjects like race, class, gender, and ethical issues in business management, while others connect journal research to professional practice contexts such as nursing or school counseling.

A strong essay engaging with journal literature requires a focused thesis that moves beyond summary toward analysis or argument — explaining not just what researchers found, but why those findings matter or where they fall short. Evidence drawn directly from the article's data, methodology, and stated implications carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating a journal article as simply true rather than as a constructed argument subject to scrutiny.

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Research Paper Undergraduate
Evolution of Whales and Dolphins
Dolphins and porpoises and whales belong to either of two cetacean families, the Platanistidae (fresh-water dolphins) or Delphinidae (including all other dolphins, the porpoises, the porpoises and cetaceans commonly…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Adult Daycare Proposal Golden Years
The proposed program will demonstrate a significant goal of reducing the number of adults, needing daily medical and social supervision who must receive such care from non-formal caregivers.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Slips if IT\'s Not One
Slips of the tongue, lapsus linguae, parapraxes or fehlleistung are many different ways to say, perhaps, the same thing. During the course of our lives we all certainly have made an error or two in speech.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Occupational health and safety considerations in lighting
¶ … Risk and Hazard Factors of Bright Blue Light
Paper Undergraduate
Freedom and Responsibility: An Ethical
There are many who suggest that from an ethical point-of-view, freedom and responsibly are in essence one and the same thing. In other words, this refers to the view that freedom implies responsibility in a moral and…
Paper Undergraduate
Wildland recreation management in the national fire plan
National Fire Plan & Community Preparedness
Paper Undergraduate
Cultural diversity effects on nursing practice in the future
¶ … cultural diversity affect you as a nurse in ten years?
Paper Undergraduate
Learning Quest: Neo and On-Boarding
Studies have shown time and again that organizations of all types and sizes consistently identify their human capital as their most important resource, and the relationship between productive employees and a company's…
Paper Undergraduate
Friends Matter to Your Brain
¶ … friends matter to your brain" ( October 12th, 2010) is a simplistic treatment on the brain's reaction to recognizing friends as compared to neurological response when faced with strangers.
Paper Undergraduate
Bureaucracy power in various institutions
Bureaucracy According to Weber and Foucault