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Bell Work Answer the questions on your bell work (it looks like this: What are the steps to the Scientific Method? Which step do you think is the most important and why? How can you stay safe in the lab? Why do you think lab safety is so important?
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One of the most important parts of the scientific method
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Review the Scientific Method Obsevation Hypothesis Experimental Design Analysis Conclusions
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Hypothesis The hypothesis should always be an If... then statement. (If I do this, then this will happen) The if part of the statement should be your independent variable The then part of the statement should be your dependent variable or state what you are measuring. The hypothesis is what drives the entire experiment, so it is the most important part!!!
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Controls When creating an experiment you must have a control. A control is a way to compare your results to the experimental group. Controls should simulate a typical response.
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Placebo A placebo is a substance given to the control group that should have no therapeutic effect For example, commercials on the radio ask people to volunteer to try a new acne medication. What they say in the fine print is that half the participants will really just taking a sugar pill, not the acne medication, so they have a basis for comparison. Why do you think using a placebo is beneficial? It shows if there is a placebo effect (when the acne disappears just because the person believes it will because they think they are receiving a treatment).
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Variables A variable is the thing that is changing in the experiment. You should only change one variable at a time. The variable that you deliberately changed is the manipulated or independent variable. The variable that changes as a response to that variable is the responding or dependent variable.
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Redi’s Experiment Observation – flies land on meat that is uncovered and then maggots appear. Hypothesis – Flies produce maggots Procedure – Redi put a piece of meat in two jars. He covered one in cheesecloth. Analysis – The meat in the covered jar did not develop maggots, but the uncovered jar did. Conclusion – There is no such thing as spontaneous generation.
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What was the... Control Why did he need the control? Dependent variable Independent variable Constants
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Theories Not all hypothesis can be tested... When this occurs observations must be interpreted to create and support a theory. Hypotheses need to be built upon by many scientists and a lot of ‘proof’ needs to be found before a hypothesis can be considered a theory.
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Publishing and Repeating Redi published his experiment Three scientists reproduced his experiment in different ways Needham – tried to disprove Redi Spallazani – disproved Needham Pasteur – used Spallazani’s experiment to create the process of pasteurization.
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‘Publishing’ Your Experiments You will have to complete lab write-ups in this class. These write-ups need to follow the standard format for any science writing: Theory – Background information about the topics in the lab. Results – This is the raw data without any interpretation or explanation. Conclusions – This is where you explain your results and discuss an errors or future endeavors.
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Theory The best way to write good theory is to start with a good hypothesis. Pick out the key words in your hypothesis, and these are the key concepts that should be explained in your theory. The theory section should be written before you finish collecting your results. It should include your hypothesis and explain the science behind why you chose your hypothesis
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Results This section should include Data tables with labels Some type of representation of the data (graph, picture, calculations, etc.) Caption explaining each table or graph. There should be absolutely no ‘because’. This section does not explain why you got the results you did.
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Conclusion The conclusion needs to include Explanation of results with scientific fact to back it up. Errors that may have occurred during the lab. There are always possible errors! Errors should never make you look careless. Never use miscalculations or errors of measurement or blame other classmates. Try to choose non-human errors whenever possible.
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Dive Response When marine mammals dive under water their body responds. This also happens to humans to a slightly lesser degree. Our heart rates slow down by about 25% Cappillaries close off to our extremities leaving more oxygen to be used for our heart and brains. This optimized respiration occurs to allow us (and other marine mammals to stay underwater longer.
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What Causes This?
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