4.3 Article

Determining journal article citation classics in school psychology: An updated bibliometric analysis using Google Scholar, Scopus, and Web of Science

Journal

JOURNAL OF SCHOOL PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 90, Issue -, Pages 94-113

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jsp.2021.11.001

Keywords

Citations; School psychology; Bibliometrics; Google Scholar; Scopus; Web of Science

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Bibliometric analyses have been used to examine and evaluate literature in a field of study, and citation classics have been identified as highly influential articles. This study aims to replicate and extend previous research by including more journals, using multiple databases, and identifying the most highly cited articles. The results show that the majority of citation classics in school psychology focus on quantitative research and the relationships between constructs, with a new category of methodological and statistical articles emerging.
Bibliometric analyses have been the primary form of examining and evaluating literature within a field of study. By focusing on citation count and source, researchers have been able to identify journal articles considered to be high impact in reach and relevance, branding them citation classics in a field. As time progresses, technology, methods, and metrics for conducting these analyses have improved, and although there have been several studies designed to identify citation classics and patterns of citations supporting them in school psychology literature, none have done so in an updated, comprehensive manner. To address these limitations, the current study aims to replicate and extend these works in three major ways: (a) including 11 primary school psychology journals in the search, (b) using three of the largest reference databases, and (c) collapsing results across these databases to accurately identify the most highly cited articles. The search yielded evidence of more than 12,000 articles accruing more than 500,000 citations. The 100 most highly cited articles were identified, and the majority were classified as explicative (n = 63) and quantitative (n = 70). Themes of bullying, burnout, and teacher-child relationships were the prominent focus. School psychology's citation classics tended to feature quantitative research and examine the relations between constructs, and several revealed a new category of citations classics: the methodological and statistical article.

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