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S.T.E.M. Science Technology Engineering Mathematics What does S.T.E.M. stand for?
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Science - Method of finding out about the natural world through observations and experiments. Science can be a noun and a verb.
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Technology - The knowledge and skills available to a society. Technology has been around much longer than science.
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Engineering - Application of knowledge to design and or build something useful Engineers want to make things better.
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Mathematics - The study of numbers, shapes and patterns. Math is the language of science.
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Assignment: Read and annotate Lesson 1
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Chapter 1 Lesson 1 Observing - Using senses to gather information.
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Types of Observations Describing without numbers. Qualitative Observation Describing with numbers. Quantitative Observation
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Activity 1 – Making Observations
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Explain or interpret things you observe. Inferring (making an inference) - Making a statement about the future based on prior observations. Predicting -
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Grouping items together that are alike. Classifying - Forming a conclusion based on observations and data. Evaluating -
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Creating a representation of an object or process. Making Models -
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1. What does S.T.E.M. stand for? Quiz! 3. What do all scientists do? 4. What do all engineers do? 5. Do you think that you would make a good engineer? Explain why or why not. 2. What word MUST be in any good definition of science?
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Activity 2 – Using Science to Find Out
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Lesson 2 – Thinking Like a Scientist What qualities do scientists possess?
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Scientists possess these qualitites Curiosity, Honesty, Creativity, Open-mindedness, Skepticism, Good ethics, Bias awareness
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Skepticism - Having an attitude of doubt. Ethics - Rules of right and wrong
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Bias - Influence the outcome one way or another; unfair. A biased experiment is not good. Why?
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Scientific Reasoning - Logical way of thinking based on gathering and evaluating evidence. Scientific reasoning must be objective not subjective.
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Objective - Subjective - Not based on opinion Based on opinion or personal feelings
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Deductive Reasoning - Applying a general idea to a specific observation. general to specific
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Inductive Reasoning - Using a specific observation to form a general conclusion. specific to general
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Faulty reasoning will form a wrong conclusion.
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Lesson 3 – Scientific Inquiry Read Page 18 “heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones.” Deductive or Inductive Reasoning? Demo – free-fall tube with vacuum Specific to general conclusion. Demo – drop paper with baseball
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Lesson 3 – Scientific Inquiry Scientific Inquiry - trying to find an answer to a question Read Page 18 What does inquire mean?
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1. Pose a Question 2. Develop a Hypothesis 3. Conduct an Experiment 4. Form a Conclusion Possible Steps in Scientific Inquiry
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Hypothesis - A possible answer to a question. Must be testable!
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Experiment - The test of a hypothesis.
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Variables - Purposely changed by the experimenter; independent variable Manipulated Variable - Factors that can change in an experiment. Responding Variable - Variable the may be observed to change in the experiment; dependent variable
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Controlled Experiment - Facts, figures, evidence gathered from the experiment. Data - Only one variable is changed at a time. Graphs can help reveal patterns in data.
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Conclusion - Results of what was discovered in the experiment. ASSIGN: Read and Annotate Pages 18- 26
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Evidence -
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