
Scholarly method
The scholarly method or scholarship is the body of principles and practices used by scholars and academics to make their claims about the subject as valid and trustworthy as possible, and to make them known to the scholarly public. It is the methods that systemically advance the teaching, research, and practice of a given scholarly or academic field of study through rigorous inquiry. Scholarship is noted by its significance to its particular profession, and is creative, can be documented, can be replicated or elaborated, and can be and is peer reviewed through various methods. The scholarly method includes the subcategories of the scientific method, in which scientists prove their claims, and the historical method, in which historians verify their claims.
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- enThe scholarly method or scholarship is the body of principles and practices used by scholars and academics to make their claims about the subject as valid and trustworthy as possible, and to make them known to the scholarly public. It is the methods that systemically advance the teaching, research, and practice of a given scholarly or academic field of study through rigorous inquiry. Scholarship is noted by its significance to its particular profession, and is creative, can be documented, can be replicated or elaborated, and can be and is peer reviewed through various methods. The scholarly method includes the subcategories of the scientific method, in which scientists prove their claims, and the historical method, in which historians verify their claims.
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- DifferentFrom
- Scholarism
- Scholarship
- Scholasticism
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- enThe scholarly method or scholarship is the body of principles and practices used by scholars and academics to make their claims about the subject as valid and trustworthy as possible, and to make them known to the scholarly public. It is the methods that systemically advance the teaching, research, and practice of a given scholarly or academic field of study through rigorous inquiry. Scholarship is noted by its significance to its particular profession, and is creative, can be documented, can be replicated or elaborated, and can be and is peer reviewed through various methods. The scholarly method includes the subcategories of the scientific method, in which scientists prove their claims, and the historical method, in which historians verify their claims.
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- enScholarly method
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- Academia
- Academic authorship
- Academic publishing
- Academy
- Category:Academia
- Category:Criticism
- Category:Methodology
- Category:Scholars
- Causality
- Data
- Discipline (academia)
- Doctor (title)
- Empirical
- Empirical method
- Empiricism
- Epistemology
- Evidence
- Experimental method
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- Historian
- Historical method
- Historical revisionism
- Historiography
- History of scholarship
- Hypothesis
- Inquiry
- Knowledge
- Manual of style
- Natural science
- Observable
- Observation
- Peer-reviewed
- Phenomenon
- Philosophy of history
- Practice theory
- Primary source
- Principle
- Professor
- Reasoning
- Research
- Rigour
- Scholar
- Science
- Scientific method
- Social science
- Source criticism
- Teaching
- Theory
- Thesis, antithesis, synthesis
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- Variable (mathematics)
- Wikt:practice
- Wissenschaft
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- fNYV
- m.03b74l
- Q17079481
- Scholarly method
- Videnskabelig metode
- Ysgolheictod
- Subject
- Category:Academia
- Category:Criticism
- Category:Methodology
- Category:Scholars
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- Scholarly method?oldid=1122941498&ns=0
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- 1122941498
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