Variables in Science Experiments

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Presentation transcript:

Variables in Science Experiments What makes an experiment “fair”?

Variables A variable is something that is changed A constant, or control, is something that does not change

Science experiments use… Independent Variable: the one factor that is changed by the person doing the experiment Dependent Variable: the factor which is measured in the experiment Constants: all the factors that stay the same in an experiment

A birdy example… Imagine you want to see what color of bird feeders your local birds preferred. Red? Blue? Green? If a student wanted to determine whether feeder color has an effect, he might suggest, “if I put up a red, blue, and green feeder, birds will visit the green feeder more” as a hypothesis. He might speculate that the green feeder, being the most “camouflaged” or “natural” might be visited the most.

Our Constants and Variables Independent Variable: color of the feeders Dependent Variable: amount of seed eaten Constants: everything else that is kept the same, for example: the location of the feeders the kind of feeder used putting the feeders out at the same time Independent Variable: the one factor that is changed by the person doing the experiment Dependent Variable: the factor which is measured in the experiment Constants: all the factors that stay the same in an experiment

Our Experimental Design Constants Location of feeders Kind of seed Type of feeder Independent Variable Red Blue Green Dependent Amount of Seed Eaten

The experiment is FAIR. (ONLY the independent variable can change!) If everything except the independent variable is held constant, we can say: The experiment is FAIR. (ONLY the independent variable can change!)

Why is it important to only change the independent variable? Collect answers…

If you don’t… If you measure a change in the dependent variable, you won’t know whether it is the independent variable that is causing the change. Give an example: a girl wanted to know whether her dog being out in the backyard scared birds away. She thought it would, because the dog likes to bark a lot and has been known to chase little animals. For 5 days when the dog was out, she counted for an hour. For 5 days the dog wasn’t out, she counted for an hour. After she collected the data, she noticed that birds are actually out MORE when the dog is in the yard. Does that surprise you? But, what the girl didn’t think of was other things that might effect the number of birds that were out. She began thinking that maybe something else might be going on. She realized that the dog was out on sunny warm days, and not on rainy, cool days. So, even though she found a change, how will she know if it was the dog may have had an effect? Or was it the weather? See if kids can suggest improvements to the experiment. (i.e. making sure the weather and temperature is similar on the days she counts.) Independent Variable

Is Sam’s experiment fair? YES? NO? Read the following scenario to the students: Sam wants to know if birds prefer one color of feeder to another. He makes three feeders out of 2-liter bottles and paints one red, one blue, and one green. He fills the feeders with the same amount of sunflower seed, and plans to keep the feeders out for one week before measuring how much seed is eaten out of each. On Tuesday, he puts each of the feeders in his back yard: the red feeder in a large dead tree, the blue feeder he sits on the doghouse, and the green one he puts in a small bushy tree. Is Sam’s experiment fair? NO! It isn’t fair since the locations of the feeders were very different!

Is Maria’s experiment fair? YES? NO? YES! It seems fair since Maria only changed the feeder color! Read the following scenario to the students: Maria wants to know if birds prefer one color of feeder to another. She makes three feeders out of 2-liter bottles and paints one red, one blue, and one green. She fills each of the feeders with the same amount of mixed birdseed, and plans to keep the feeders out for 10 days before measuring how much seed is eaten from each feeder. She puts each of the feeders in the school courtyard in a small tree, hanging each at the same height. Does Maria’s experiment seem fair?

Is Jessie’s experiment fair? YES? NO? NO! It isn’t fair since the feeders are not out at the same time, and we know that the weather was quite different each time. Perhaps the number and kind of birds that visited during the weeks were different due to the weather. Read the following scenario to the students: Jessie wants to know if birds prefer one color of feeder to another. She makes three feeders out of 2-liter bottles and paints one red, one blue, and one green. She fills the each of the feeders with sunflower seed. She plans to leave each feeder out for 2 days and then measure the amount of seed that the birds ate. She has one hook in her backyard the she plans to hang each of the feeders on. She puts the red feeder out on Tuesday and measures the seed 2 days later, the green feeder doesn’t go out until Saturday since it was very snowy, but she is able to measure the seed 2 days later. The weather turned rainy, but she needs to finish her experiment, so blue feeder goes out on Monday and is measured 2 days later. Is Jessie’s experiment fair?

What do you think? Terry loves birds and wants to see as many as she can in her yard. She wants to know whether she is wasting money buying an expensive mixed seed, when a cheaper brand just arrived at her local store. She wonders… will the expensive seed attract more birds to her back yard? You may want to have students brainstorm in pairs, or conduct a group discussion. How would you advise her to find out if the expensive seed is better?

Terry’s Experimental Design Independent Variable ? Dependent Constants What is the Independent Variable? What is the Dependent Variable? What would you hold constant?

Terry’s Experimental Design Independent Variable Kind of seed: Expensive Cheap Dependent Number (and perhaps kinds) of birds that visit Constants Location of feeders Type of feeder Way she measures the amount of seed eaten and the way she counts birds $ What is the Independent Variable? What is the Dependent Variable? Number of birds– also, you may want to record what KINDS visit. Maybe diversity is higher with one seed or the other! What would you hold constant? There are other answers as well. Feel free to add to the list

What experiments are you planning? What are your variables? How will you keep your experiment fair?