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Published byMatthew Garrett Modified over 9 years ago
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Scientific Processes & Terms Unit 1: Scientific Processes Physical Science Steinbrink
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What is Science? Science is the knowledge obtained by observing natural events and conditions in order to discover facts and formulate laws or principles that can be verified or tested.
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Branches of Science Chemistry Physics Biology Astronomy Oceanography Meteorology Zoology Geology
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What is Pseudoscience? Research that has the appearance of science but does not follow the scientific method, usually lacking peer review and repetition of observations by independent researchers.
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Examples of Pseudoscience Big Foot Loch Ness Monster UFO’s Psychic Phenomena Astrology
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Inference Interpreting an observation or statement based on prior knowledge. An inference is an act of reasoning, not a fact.
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Observation The act of making and recording information by using your senses. –Sight –Hearing –Touch –Smell –Taste
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Observation vs. Inference Sample ObservationsSample Inferences The footprints in the soil each have five toes. An animal made the footprints. The larger footprints are about 20 cm long. A bear made the footprint. The space between each pair of footprints is about 30 cm. The animal was walking not running.
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Hypothesis An educated guess that helps to guide the research or experiment study. A hypothesis is a possible explanation for a problem using what you know and what you observe. “A tentative answer to a well-framed question—an explanation for a problem that leads to predictions that can be studied by making observations or performing experiments.”
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Prediction Tells what to do to test to see if your hypothesis is correct. Use If….then…
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Quantitative Data Deals with numbers. Data which can be measured. Length, height, area, volume, weight, speed, time, temperature, humidity, sound levels, cost, members, ages, etc. Quantitative → Quantity THINK NUMBERS
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Qualitative Data Deals with descriptions. Data can be observed but not measured. Colors, textures, smells, tastes, appearance, beauty, etc. Qualitative → Quality
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Variables A factor that changes in an experiment in order to test a hypothesis. How many variables should you test during an experiment? Just one variable at a time!
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Independent Variable What you choose to measure in an experiment. Often times this will be time units. Graphed on the x-axis
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Dependent Variable Value depends on what happens in the experiment. This is what you measure or count! Result of the independent variable. Graphed on the y-axis.
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Scientific Law A summary of many experimental results and observations; a law tells how things work
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Scientific Theory An explanation for some phenomenon that is based on observation, experimentation, and reasoning.
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