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Scientific Method1
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. 1.Activity carried on by humans that is designed to discover information about the natural world. 2.Organized inquiry into the natural world and its phenomena. 3.Science is about gaining a deeper and often useful understanding of the world. Science is not exact or perfect. From time to time, scientific explanations may change as new data is presented. The process of testing and fine-tuning theories never ends as scientists try to gain new insights into old problems2
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What is the goal of Science? To develop an understanding of the natural universe which is free of human bias.3 No opinions, NOTwhat we think! JUST THE FACTS? What does that mean?
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Scientific Method Scientist use the scientific method to solve problems.4
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What is the Scientific Method? An organized set of steps used to solve a problem. Is there a certain number of sets? NO!NO! It is simply a logical way to solve a problem.5
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Can you form conclusions about something before you make observations? NO!6 Can you form conclusions about something before you test it? NO!
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EXAMPLE Clip(1) Observation: –S–S–S–Something done through the five senses. ““““I don’t hit very well with my baseball bat.” (2) State the problem: ““““I need a bat that will allow me to hit better.” 7 What is an observation?
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(3)Form a Hypothesis: “If I use a different bat, then I will hit more home runs.” *Hypothesis must be testable! (4)Test the Hypothesis through an experiment: How could I set up this experiment?????8
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Performing a GOOD experiment 9 What is a GOOD experiment? - Does it truly tests for what it is supposed to test for? How can we make sure that our experiment is a GOOD experiment ? - Follow a few simple rules.
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Rules: #1. An experiment usually contains two variables. (1)Independent Variable (manipulated) - What the experimenter... YOU… changes. -It’s what you are testing. (2) Dependent Variable (responding) What happens, or changes, because the IV changes. It’s what you are measuring. Performing a GOOD experiment 10 T y p e o f b a t M o r e h o m e r u n s
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Rules: #2. All experiments need a control. What is a control?? A control is something to compare the experimental results to. It’s usually the normal condition. What’s our control? Our regular bat. 11
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Experiment (an experiment is used to test a hypothesis) The experiment: I will hit 100 balls with 4 bats and compare the number of homeruns. How can I make sure that the bat is the only factor affecting the way I hit the ball? 12
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How can I make sure that the bat is the only factor affecting the way I hit the ball? Ball thrown the same every time. Same type/age ball. Weather the same every day. Same number of hits every day. Same amount of sleep each night. Can you think of any others??? These are called CONSTANTS. -They are the same in the experimental group and the control group. -They do not change 13
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Why do we need Constants? To make sure we are testing for what we said we are testing for. 14
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Regular Bat Data 15
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After the Experiment (5)Analyzing the data “What is the data telling me?” What did we learn? I it more homeruns with bat #3. (6)Draw conclusions. Was the hypothesis supported? YES! What does this data mean for the future? -I will use bat #3. 16 Regular Bat
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How can we be sure that the results are real? 17
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What’s a theory? Scientific Theories are based on knowledge gained from many experiments. NOT A GUESS! 18
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OBSERVATIONS: OBSERVATIONS: Flies land on meat that is left uncovered. Later, maggots appear on the meat. HYPOTHESIS: HYPOTHESIS: Flies produce maggots. PROCEDURE: Constants: Constants: Controlled Variables: jars, type of meat, location,temperature, time Independent Variable- Manipulated Variables: gauze covering that keeps flies away from meat Uncovered jars Covered jars Several days pass Maggots appear No maggots appear Dependent Variable- Responding Variable: whether maggots appear CONCLUSION CONCLUSION: Maggots form only when flies come in contact with meat. Spontaneous generation of maggots did not occur. Redi’s Experiment on Spontaneous Generation 23
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