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Important Information FIRE DRILL INFORMATION: Take a left out of door→→go to field
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MRS. PROVENZOLA IPC LAB SAFETY AND SCIENTIFIC METHOD
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Important Information Notebook Requirements: –3 Ring Binder with Dividers Course policy sheet Lab Safety Rules et Notes by Unit Graded Work
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LAB SAFETY Please also refer to handouts for more detailed information!!
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Lab Safety Read Laboratory Safety Rules Handout /
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LAB SAFETY Safety symbols- http://www.chem.queensu.ca/Safety/whmissym.htm http://www.chem.queensu.ca/Safety/whmissym.htm http://www.chem.queensu.ca/Safety/Safety_Symbols.htm http://www.chem.queensu.ca/Safety/TDGA_Symbols.htm Safety contract- MUST BE RETURNED BY FRIDAY! Safety quiz- Friday, 8/27 QUIZ grade—must make an 80% or higher to be able to go to lab.
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THE NATURE OF SCIENCE Using the Scientific Method
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WHAT IS SCIENCE? IT IS THE STUDY OF NATURAL PATTERNS.
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Science Categories LIFE PHYSICAL EARTH
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EXPLANATIONS CAN CHANGE OVER TIME Investigations include: Observation Experimentation Modeling
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The Scientific Method A logical, organized way of solving problems that help answer questions Define the Problem Collect Background Information Form a Hypothesis Test the Hypothesis Make and Record Observations/Analyze Data Draw a Conclusion
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Defining the Problem & Collecting Background Information Identify the problem. Example: What are the effects of acid rain on salamanders? Collect information about the problem. Example: We should know the normal development of salamanders as well as the characteristics of areas that are affected by acid rain.
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FORMULATE A HYPOTHESIS An educated guess that is based on PRIOR KNOWLEDGE or background A proposed answer to the question or problem. A statement that can be tested
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TESTING THE HYPOTHESIS p.1/2 An experiment is a controlled procedure designed to test a hypothesis. In an experiment, one variable, or condition, is changed and the response of another variable is measured.
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THE EXPERIMENT p.2/2 Independent variable: the condition that is varied (or changed). Dependent variable: the condition that responds to the changes in the I.V. To be a controlled experiment, it must have two identical groups: Experimental group- the group that is exposed to the changes in the I.V.
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CONTROL GROUP Control group- the group that is NOT exposed to changes to ensure that the results that occur are indeed a result of the independent variable. It is the standard for comparison Ex. A room is kept at 70 O C for the plants. The plants receive the same soil mix amount of water, and the type of pot and size of pots….. on and on...
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MAKING & RECORDING OBSERVATIONS p. 1/4 Must keep careful records. Must state how the experiment was planned, carried out, materials & equipment used, and how long it took. Must record all observations made.
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MAKING & RECORDING OBSERVATIONS p.2/4 May include: drawings, tables, graphs, diagrams, written observations, photographs or even sound recordings.
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OBSERVATIONS VS. INFERENCES p.4/4 Observation: an examination of something in nature. Detected by any of the five senses. Inference: Inference- a judgement based on your observation. It is a personal opinion.
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DRAWING CONCLUSIONS p.1/2 The answer to a scientific question is formulated by drawing a conclusion based on data (scientific facts collected during the experiment) Statistics help form the conclusion.
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CONCLUSIONS p.2/2 Before accepting conclusions, scientists retest their hypotheses several times. Later other scientists repeat the experiment until the hypothesis and the conclusion are supported or rejected.
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Writing a Conclusion Restate the problem Restate the hypothesis Restate the variables Define the trends Accept or reject the hypothesis and why Sources of error
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THEORY A theory is a set of related hypotheses that have been tested and confirmed many times, by many scientists. It unites and explains a broad range of observations. When a hypothesis explains why “natural” events occur through observations and investigations over a long period of time, it becomes a theory. Example: Theory of Evolution
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THEORY At all times, however, theories and principles are subject to revision or replacement by a new theory or principle that provides a better or more complete explanation.
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Scientific Law When a hypothesis explains how “facts of nature” occurs, it becomes scientific principle or law. Example: Law of Gravity Statement that ALWAYS seems to be true.
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Standards of Measurement
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Standard An exact quantity that people agree on. It’s used for comparison
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Technology Applied science helping people.
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Measurements Must have a number and a unit! Gram……. Meters……. Liters…….. Seconds….. Joules……..
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System International of Units (SI) – improvement on the metric system Understood WORLDWIDE! Based on multiples of 10 Prefixes indicate multiples
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LENGTH -- Measures the distance between 2 points. Meters
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Volume The amount of space an object occupies. Liters
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Volume of Solid Obj. #7c. Volume can be measured by: 1) length x width x height = V (regularly shaped solid object) 2) 3.5 x 2 x 4 = 28cm3 4cm 3.52 cm
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Volume - 2) water displacement method volume of water & object - water alone = V (irregularly shaped solid object) 6.6 ml water ---- --- -- -- ----------- ___. ------- ----------- ___. ------- ------------- ___. ------- -- Water And object --- 8.4 ml 8.4 -6.6 = -------- 1.8 ml object
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Volume using a graduated cylinder (fluids) Read the bottom of the meniscus -- the curved surface of liquid.
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Mass The amount of matter. Measured in Grams
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Density Mass per unit volume. g/L or g/cm3 I’m a derived Unit!
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Time Interval between 2 events. Measured in seconds
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Temperature Thermometer SI standard – KELVIN Also in Fahrenheit and Celsius
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Communicating with Graphs
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Graphs Visual Display of information or data Music preferences…Is there a difference?
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Line Grahps dependent variable changes due to change in the independent variable Y-axis = dependent X-axis = independent
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The relationship between the vapor Pressure of water and its temperature Line graphs show Change over time Makes sense and units of measurements are consistent
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Bar Graph= compare info collected by counting
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Circle/Pie Graph Shows how a whole is broken into smaller pieces. What area of the budget gets the least amount of money?
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