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Published bySiska Kartawijaya Modified over 6 years ago
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The scientific method is an organized way to solve a problem
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Scientific Method Steps
1. Define the problem. 2. Formulate a hypothesis. 3. Testing the hypothesis/ experiment. 4. Record/analyze data. 5. Make a conclusion. 6. Report findings to others so they can repeat the experiment.
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The steps of the Scientific Method?
1-Define the problem (What’s the Question) What are you trying to find out? What just happened? Why does it do that? HUH?
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Examples of questions:
Why do pigeons bob their heads when they walk? Why do leaves turn color in the fall?
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2-Formulate a Hypothesis
Hypothesis- A possible explanation for an observation that can be tested.
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Hypothesis An educated guess a prediction Use “If”, “then” format
We predict that if we drop a ball from a higher height, then it will bounce higher. “If” is the manipulated variable. “Then” is the responding variable.
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- Testing the hypothesis
3-Experimentation - Testing the hypothesis - Finding a procedure to either verify or disprove the hypothesis Hypothesis is accepted only when predicted effects are observed and repeatable
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Experiment design is critical to make experiment and hypothesis accepted
Controlled Experiment- Situation is set up more than once to test your hypothesis Variable- A single factor in the experiment is changed to see if this has an effect on the results Control group- One group in the experiment where no change is made. Constant- Other variables in the experiment that are kept the same
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Independent & Dependent Variables
Independent Variable: A variable that is controlled by the experimenter; the ONLY one over which YOU have direct control. Dependent Variable: The thing that you measure in the experiment (Ex. Height of plant) Conventionally the independent variable is plotted on the horizontal axis (also known as the x-axis) and the dependent variable on the vertical axis (or the y-axis)
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Fill in the dependent and independent variables on the axes below:
Example: Hypothesis – The more time a student spends thinking before blurting out, the less time they spend in the Assistant Principals office. Fill in the dependent and independent variables on the axes below: Time in AP office Time spent thinking before speaking
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Characteristics of a well designed experiment:
The sample size is large enough to draw a valid conclusion about the hypothesis Only one significant variable is tested through the experiment. A control group is present Conclusions must be based on measurable quantities or clear criteria and not subject to opinion of the observer (bias)
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- Looking at data obtained in the experiment-
4- Analyze Data - Looking at data obtained in the experiment- (Use graphs, charts, etc.) - Looking for patterns or relationships
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- Draw a conclusion about your data
5.Draw Conclusions - Draw a conclusion about your data (Does the data support your hypothesis or not)
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6-Report Observations-
Record your data and report in detail your means experimentation and observed results Scientists must report all the details because the experiment has to be repeatable.
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