 Hi, today I want to explain how you can find journals, deaf journals that are peer-reviewed. Sometimes your professor wants you to find scholarly types of articles, not from popular magazines, and it's easy to do. First, I will show you how to find a journal title. Go to the library home page, library.rit.edu, and you'll notice a search bar in the middle of the page. Click on the journals tab. I will type in the title, American Annals of the Deaf. You'll notice we have several databases that have that title, plus we have it in print. I'm interested in looking for very, very old articles. I notice on the bottom here it says 1847 to 1886, so I'll go ahead and click on that link. Make sure you change the search bar to In This Journal. You do not want to search the whole database. You want to search this specific journal. Suppose I want something from the 1800s. Click on that decade. This shows you different articles from that year. I clicked on a title I like. You can email it to yourself, download it as a PDF, or read it online. You can also cite it. I will show you how to cite it properly. I want to remind you to double-check the citations because sometimes there are small mistakes. So make sure you check. I'm going to find another article. I'm interested in finding articles about La Paix. He was a French priest in Paris, and he opened up the first school for the deaf, public school in the world in the 1700s. So here I'm interested in this article. It's related to a play about him. It was a popular play. It talks about his son, an adopted son. His name was Count of Solar, and he was abandoned in the woods by his family. So La Paix adopted him. I can type in the title of another journal here. The next title I want to look for is the Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education. There are several links to the databases. I'm going to try the first one to show you a different database. You can search within the journal itself. I am going to try the first one to show you a different database. I am interested in ASL poetry. I found a few articles. I'm curious about the first title. It gives you an abstract and the full article. Again, you can email, save it, cite it, or read it online. This article talks about deaf poets and their views of signed poetry. This focuses on the country of Brazil. Interesting. You will find fascinating articles on a variety of topics related to the deaf field. I'm going back now to the journal finder page and I want to find a different journal title, Sign Language Studies. You see links to different databases. I will click on the first one. Select Muse, another database. I want you to get used to different databases and how to search within those different databases. Make sure you type in the keywords here. In the right, search within the journal, not the search bar at the top. Because up at the top, it will search the whole database. I only want to search inside this journal. Suppose I'm interested in black ASL. You can see there are several articles about this topic. I'm curious about the first one. The Black ASL Project. Joseph Hill, our professor here in the ASLIE department, is involved with this project and he co-wrote the article. Again, you can read it online, download it, save it, or email the article. Also, it shows you how to cite it. That concludes my explanation about how to find peer-reviewed deaf journals.