You will be asked to find peer-reviewed articles in peer-reviewed journals for your assignments. A peer-reviewed article is authored by experts and reviewed by other experts who examine quality, utility, and timeliness. The peer-reviewed article will be published only if it passes this peer-review process. The peers who evaluate articles before they can be published are called referees; sometimes you will hear the phrase refereed journal rather than peer-reviewed journal.
Note: Not every item in a peer reviewed journal has gone through the peer review process. Items such as editorials, commentaries, and book reviews are often included in peer reviewed journals without going through the peer review process.
In many of our databases, you can click on the journal title from your results list and get more information. Often times this information includes whether it is peer reviewed (or refereed) or not.
If that information is missing or you're still unclear, you can Google JOURNAL NAME AND PEER REVIEW to get more information.
Another resources to use is a library database called Ulrich's. Search for the journal title and you can find all sorts of publication information for the journal. If it includes a black and white referee shirt, then it is a peer reviewed journal.
Provides information on periodicals, both popular and scholarly, including subject, publisher, fulltext and indexing database coverage, and reviews written by librarians.