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Presentation transcript:

Type your questions in the Chat Window. Remember to make sure the speaker icon above is enabled! It should be green. Check your volume levels by selecting “Adjust Speaker Volume”. Audio/Video has only been enabled for presenters during this webinar. If you have trouble connecting or lose a connection and need assistance during the webinar Technical Notes

Scientist Skills: How to develop a research question 11 September 2012 Dr. Dixon Butler and GLOBE Program Office Science & Education Team

Overview of this webinar The GLOBE Inquiry Model Finding it online Developing a research question Qualities of a good question What to avoid Using the research question worksheet and finding it online Important upcoming dates for the SCRC Outline

Scientist Skills webinar series This is the first in a three-part series of webinars on building scientist skills that is part of Phase 2 of the Student Climate Research Campaign (SCRC). The remaining parts of this series will be on: 8 January 2013—Scientist Skills: How to overcome research problems 2 April 2013—Scientist Skills: Presenting your results As members of the GLOBE community you’ve been trained on how to collect scientific data and enter it into the database This is an important part of the scientific process! However when it comes to conducting a research investigation, there are other steps that must take place, both before, during, and after you collect data

The GLOBE Inquiry Model This model is available online in the Student Zone

Pose Questions

Where do you begin? I wonder……? Brainstorm questions you wish to investigate Identify one or more questions that are: Interesting to you Able to be answered using available data or GLOBE measurements Answerable in the time available for your research project Revisit these questions throughout the course of the project, as necessary. Scientists often refine their questions as they do research –they are always learning! After you have observed the environment around you:

Brainstorm questions you wish to investigate Was anything unusual? Were you surprised by anything? Can you explain what you saw or measured? If you were with other students, Did everybody see things in the same way? Did anything you observed trigger an argument or discussion? If you went to the same place again, what changes would you expect? If you went to a different place, how would you expect it to be different? Think about what you have seen or measured

Answering a Question Do you care about the answer? Would your classmates? What do you think the answer might be? How many answers are possible? What will it take to answer the question? Is there more than one way to get to the answer? Will it be easy or hard to get to an answer? How good do you need the answer to be? What help and/or equipment will you need to answer the question? Can you do it? How long should it take to get the answer?

A question that poses a problem worth solving A question that forces you to evaluate evidence and compare different possible answers A good research question takes real work to answer, so it should also interest you It helps if the question also interests others (important for engaging others when you present your research) A good research question must be practical as well Should be able to be answered in the time available to you Data required to answer the question must be available or obtainable Qualities of a good research question

Avoid a question with a simple yes or no answer A good research question could have more than one answer! Avoid a question that could easily be answered by looking it up in a book or on the Internet The answer to a good research question should not be immediately obvious! Avoid a question whose answer depends on just one or two missing facts A good research question requires you to go beyond existing explanations or perhaps completes or adapts existing explanations for a phenomenon or a place Things to avoid…

Worksheet to evaluate questions

Show where worksheet is (web screenshot)

Using the worksheet: An example Is there a relationship between today’s clouds and tomorrow’s weather?

Using the worksheet: An example How reliable is a prediction of tomorrow’s weather based on today’s cloud observations?

Is a problem worth solving Evaluate evidence Interests you Is Practical Summary: A good research question…

10 September 2012: Official launch of Phase 2! If you participated in Phase 1, get your e-gift on the SCRC webpage September 2012: Great Global Investigation of Climate IOP September 2012-June 2013: Phenology and Climate project 30 September 2012: Calendar Competition entries due October 2012: Climate and Land Cover IOP 2 October 2012: Next SCRC webinar “Learning how to study climate using GLOBE Phenology protocols” 14 UTC 00 UTC (3 October) Thank you for attending! Important upcoming dates for SCRC – Phase 2