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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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Paper Undergraduate
Substance Abuse Counseling Theories Substance
Substance abuse: Reality therapy and other alternative therapeutic strategies
Paper Undergraduate
Impact of open skies agreements on airline competition and global economy
The role of aviation in the globalization process has been very significant and important since the aviation industry can easily bring businesspeople together, enhance the movement of high-value, time-critical products…
Paper Undergraduate
Mental Health Counseling and Research:
Mental Health Counseling and Research: A Critical Analysis
Paper Undergraduate
The role and practice of midwifery in healthcare
Midwifery care through labor and delivery lowers complication rates and reduces the likelihood of unnecessary cesarean sections.
Paper Doctorate
Domestic Violence Is Domestic Violence a Learned
Society attributes domestic violence with learned behavior. Sadly, domestic violence is a serious issue with long-term implications that affects everyone. Domestic violence is a multi-generational problem, and is found in all socio-economic levels, religions, racial, and ethnic backgrounds. Possible predictors of domestic violence can cue individuals to the power required of men that hold the patriarchal order in society valuable.
Paper High School
Minorities in World War II
This paper looks at the impact World War II had upon minority groups: Native Americans, African Americans, Japanese Americans, and women, as specific case studies. It shows that the impact was profound although the positive aspect of the impact was limited sometimes. Overall, minorities were inspired to demand greater political and civil liberties after the war.
Paper Doctorate
Criminal justice and capital punishment
This paper will briefly examine a few of the arguments for and against the application of the death penalty. It examines the history of capital punishment, the current global perspective on the subject, the inequities of the application of the death penalty, and the continuum of moral justification for taking a human life. Proponents of the death penalty argue five purposes for its use, to remove from society someone who would cause more harm, someone who is incapable of rehabilitation, to deter others from committing murder, to punish the criminal, and to take retribution on behalf of the victim. Opponents of the death penalty argue that death constitutes "cruel and unusual punishment", that the various means used by the state kill a criminal are cruel, that the death penalty is invoked disproportionally against the poor, as well as against racial, ethnic and religious minorities, that the death penalty is applied arbitrarily and inconsistently, and wrongly convicted, innocent people have received death sentences and be executed, that a rehabilitated criminal can make a morally valuable contribution to society and that killing human life under any circumstances is morally wrong.
Paper Undergraduate
German Foreign Policy Following World
Following World War II, Germany remained ideologically and geographically divided between the two opposing sides of the Cold War, and only after the fall of the Soviet Union did the country reunify and begin to…
Paper Masters
Computer forensic evidence collection and analysis
¶ … 2005, one file sent by the BTK killer to a Wichita television station led police to investigate Dennis Rader, a church president, and ended the 30-year murder spree of this serial killer.
Paper Doctorate
Proper responses to workplace conflict in industrial-organizational psychology
The case study of the call center brings to light a number of industrial/organizational issues in the interaction between the coworkers. There are numerous underlying issues that undermine the progress and the cohesion…