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Published byGertrude Park Modified over 9 years ago
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1. Copy homework 2. Look at the 2 handouts with your shoulder partner. Read some of the different scientific theories and laws. 3. In your science notebook, compare and contrast scientific theories and laws. (Skip a few lines between each definition so you can add to them.)
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1. Copy homework and take out a sheet of bellwork paper. 2. Look at the vocabulary words on the cabinets in the back of the room. 3. Pick 2 words from each cabinet (you will have 6 total) and create a fill-in-the blank quiz question for each of them. Do NOT show your teammates! (You can use your notes and Ch 1 for help) Example) The ________ variable is what you measure in an experiment.
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Benefits (advantages/rewards for doing it) Benefits (advantages/rewards for NOT doing it) Costs (disadvantages/risks for doing it) Costs (disadvantages/risks for NOT doing it)
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Ch 2 Lessons 2-3
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Used by scientists to test their ideas about things they cannot observe directly
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Well-tested explanation for a wide range of observations and experimental results They become better accepted as more and more scientists collect observations that add to the explanation Exs) Atomic Theory – all substances made of atoms Big Bang Theory
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A statement that describes what scientists expect to happen every time under a particular set of conditions For examples) 1. Law of Gravity 2. For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction
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Why?
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