Scientific Method.  Are girls more likely to cyber-bully than boys are?  Are children of divorced parents less likely to commit to romantic relationships?

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Presentation transcript:

Scientific Method

 Are girls more likely to cyber-bully than boys are?  Are children of divorced parents less likely to commit to romantic relationships?  Can parents’ preoccupation with their own weight influence their children’s dieting behavior?

 How many hours of sleep are necessary to avoid a decline in mental alertness?  Are adolescents who play violent video games more aggressive than adolescents who do not play violent video games?  Do children who grow up with brothers and sisters develop better social skills than children who grow up without brothers and sisters?

Required Reading and understanding research articles Understand the abstract of studies To be educated consumers of information Evaluating journal articles Learn how to do research Learn about others’ practices (methods) Decision making

1. The method of tenacity 2. The method of intuition 3. The method of authority (the method of faith ) 4. The rational method 5. The empirical method

 Information is accepted as true because it has always been believed or because superstition supports it. 1. Overemphasis on memorization harms your cognitive reasoning 2. You cannot teach an old dog new tricks 3. Opposites attract 4. You should never walk under a ladder

Information is accepted on the basis of a hunch or “gut feeling”. Information is accepted as true because it “feels right”  Speaking mother language at home will harm students’ achievement in school.  You look at a student and realize he is not understanding.

 A person finds answers by seeking out an authority on the subject.  This can mean consulting an expert directly or going to a library or a website to read the works of an expert.

 It does not always provide accurate information.  The answers obtained from an expert could represent subjective, personal opinion rather than true expert knowledge.

 Expert in what?  Not really an expert. When a famous athlete appears on television telling you what soup is more nutritious, should you assume that being an outstanding football player makes him an expert on nutrition?

 Is a variant of the method of authority in which people have unquestioning trust in the authority figure and, therefore, accept information from the authority without doubt or challenge.

Involves seeking answers by logical reasoning.  Research shows technology improves learning. Mr.  Fox uses technology in his teaching.  Mr. Fox improves his students’ learning

 The empirical method, or empiricism, uses observation or direct sensory experience to obtain knowledge.  Attempts to answer questions by direct observation or personal experience.  I use technology in my courses to see if it helps my students.

 It is fairly common for people to misperceive or misinterpret the world around them.

Sunrise & Sunset Long and Short lines

 Is an approach to acquiring knowledge that involves formulating specific questions and then systematically finding answers.  The planned and systematic application of the empirical method

 By combining several different methods of acquiring knowledge, we hope to avoid the pitfalls of any individual method used by itself.  The scientific method is a carefully developed system for asking and answering questions so that the answers we discover are as accurate as possible.

Step 1: Observe behavior or other phenomena Step 2: Form a tentative answer or explanation (a hypothesis (guess a reason) Step 3: Use your hypothesis to generate a testable prediction Step 4: Make systematic, planned observations (data collection) Step 5: Use the observations to evaluate (support, refute, or refine) the original hypothesis

 It is not necessary to start with a well- planned, systematic investigation.  Simply observe the world around you until some behavior or event catches your attention. Tina, Jennifer & Sue told me this winter is very depressing

 Induction, or inductive reasoning, involves using a relatively small set of specific observations as the basis for forming a general statement about a larger set of possible observations.  People are more depressed during winter

 This step in the process usually begins by identifying factors, or variables, that are associated with your observation. Identify Why are people more depressed during winter? What other variables are associated with winter and depression?

 Health: People tend to catch colds and get the flu during the winter, and perhaps their illness leads to depression.  Light: Perhaps people become depressed in the winter because the weather is literally dark and depressing.

As People which one makes them depressed during winter  Health  Light

Light

This is the actual research or data collection phase of the scientific method. The goal is to provide a fair and unbiased test of the research hypothesis by observing whether the prediction is correct.

 Use the observations to support, refute, or refine the original hypothesis  To what extent do the observations agree with the predictions?

 Explain what it means to say that the scientific method or the research process can be viewed as a never ending circle or a spiral of steps rather than a linear process that leads to an end.