Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Scientific Method and Designing Your Cricket Experiment.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Scientific Method and Designing Your Cricket Experiment."— Presentation transcript:

1 Scientific Method and Designing Your Cricket Experiment

2 Initial Observation Use your senses to observe -be objective (measure), not subjective (opinions) –See, hear, touch, taste, smell, etc. Can also use tools to measure (label numbers) –Temperature, length, volume, etc.

3 Observations: Two Types Qualitative – describe what we observe –EX: The flower has white petals. –EX: Bob has blue eyes. Quantitative –measure what we observe –EX: The flower has seven petals. –EX: Bob has two eyes.

4 Try to make quantitative observations out of qualitative ones. Qualitative: The dead fish is smelly. Quantitative: You could ask a person to rate the “smelliness” from 1-5.

5 TIPS FOR GOOD OBSERVATIONS 1.Be specific 2.Use numbers 3.Use terms others would understand 4.Avoid using emotions, good/bad, or opinions 5.This is not the time for critical evaluations…just state the facts.

6 Inference Reasonable conclusions or a hypothesis from observations you’ve made. Use judgments based on past experiences or and prior knowledge. What inference can you make here?

7 Which is the better observation? It is 58 o F in the room. It is cool in the room. The iguana likes lettuce. The iguana consumed 90% of the lettuce. The bacteria is yucky. The bacteria has a slimy appearance and smells of sulfur.

8 Problem Statement: State the Question “What is the effect of the independent variable on the dependent variable?” What is the independent variable here? What is the dependent variable here?

9 Which are Better Problem Statements? What is the effect of temperature on the height of plants grown in soil? How tall do plants get? Why does that fish always swim to the top? What is the effect of oxygen content on the water on the swimming location of a fish in a tank?

10 Observing Crickets GET A DOZEN CRICKETS WITH A CUP (hand on top)-Put them in the tank w/lid, please. Make at least 10 observations and 10 inferences Write Problem Statements related to the observation Obser vation Infere nce Proble m Stat. 1 2 3 4

11 PLAN CRICKET BEHAVIOR EXPERIMENT Laptops, if needed Refer to your articles Plan for the cricket behavior experiment: -problem statement -experiment set-up (Independent and Dependent Variables) (Block - will run 3 trials, do test run today) (Enlarge to read captions)

12 Hypothesis “If…then…” If producing oxygen bubbles in photosynthesis is related to light color, then green light will increase photosynthesis oxygen bubbles to form. Independent variable-varied by experimenter Dependent variable-changes as a result of the independent variable Prediction

13 Hypothesis 1. Must be testable – some way to check its validity 2. Must be falsifiable – must be some experiment that could show that it is not true (may not prove to be false, just have to be able to test that)

14

15 Can you test these to be falsifiable? Can you rewrite these to be testable? 1. Animals are better than plants. 2. The average tree height on the HS campus is the same as on the MS campus. 3. How many angels does it take to dance on the head of a pin?

16

17 Writing a problem statement and hypothesis for your cricket behavior tips: Sexual: male vs. female Phototaxis: how many crickets in diff. light Stimulus: food or terrain preferences Courtship: make a chart of beh. (touch, chirp, face direction, mount) Agonistic: make chart of beh. (bite, jump toward, chirp, etc.) Territorial: count crickets in areas (hut, leaves, by water, by food, by females)

18

19

20 Experiment A. Independent Variable -what you change goes on the X-axis of the graph B. Dependent Variable -what changes as a result of what you did – goes on the Y-axis of the graph

21 Independent Variable? Dependent Variable?

22 Experiment Constants-all the things in the experiment that stay the same same size Petri dishes Same agar medium Same type of bacteria

23 What are some constants here?

24 What constants are there in this experiment?

25 Control – the part of the experiment that does not have the independent variable in it Use for reference, comparison Often the normal condition (no food, room light, room temp.)

26 What is the control?

27 L-added oxygen M-control(no gas added) R-added carbon dioxide

28

29 Do you think a placebo is a control? (inert pill, one without the drug) EX: some take Celebrex®, some take a sugar pill

30 Run the tests Record the data graphs charts video write observations measurements

31 Celebrex – Placebo Experiment Results Have we proven that Celebrex® (without a doubt) improves arthritis pain? What might be another explanation? Can we prove it false? Placebo

32 Conclusion Agree or disagree with the hypothesis The 10% spray produced taller plants.

33 Repeat the Experiments Other scientists must be able to repeat your experiment with similar results to prove it true. OR they might prove it false.

34 NOW YOU WILL DESIGN AND RUN AN EXPERIMENT RECEIVE CRICKET BEHAVIOR EXPERIMENT HANDOUT LAB GROUPS OF 4 (5) BEHAVIOR VARIABLE PLAN SET-UP RUN 3 TRIALS WRITE RESULTS

35 DUE DATES: August 25- (Mon.) – Cricket Fact Sheet August 25/26 - (M/T)-Observe crickets August27-29- (w/Th/F)-Design + Run Exp. Sept. 5 - (Fri.) Cricket Report Due


Download ppt "Scientific Method and Designing Your Cricket Experiment."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google