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First Five 9/5

Schedule Book Check out Card activity Safety charades Safety Quiz GQ: How do you stay safe in a lab situation? HW: Syllabus – due today Safety contract – due today. First Five 9/5. No first five today. We will be checking out books so do number 2, have a seat and wait patiently.

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First Five 9/5

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  1. Schedule • Book Check out • Card activity • Safety charades • Safety Quiz • GQ: How do you stay safe in a lab situation? • HW: Syllabus – due today • Safety contract – due today First Five 9/5 • No first five today. We will be checking out books so do number 2, have a seat and wait patiently. • Turn in safety contract and syllabus to the box

  2. “ID” Card • On the top left corner write your name. • On the top right corner write your favorite color. • On the bottom left write one exciting thing you did this summer. • On the bottom right write one teacher expectation. • In the middle write one word that describes you.

  3. Schedule • First Five • Card activity • Scientific Method Notes • GQ: How do I determine the significant parts of the scientific method? • HW: Sunsets, souls, senses – due today • Fixed Safety Quiz • – due tomorrow First Five 9/8 • Write down everything you remember about the scientific method. • Take out sunsets, souls, and senses • Hang up Safety posters using Blue tape in the front of room

  4. Card Order Activity • Observe the order the cards are placed in. • Write down 2 -3 guesses about what order they are placed in. • Test your guesses. • Write down your final guess about the order of the cards.

  5. Schedule • First Five • Scientific Method Notes • Finish Testable questions/hypothesis • GQ: How do I determine the significant parts of the scientific method? • HW: Lab Notebook – Monday • Sunsets, souls, senses – Tomorrow • Variable Practice wkst – Due Friday First Five 9/15 • List the parts of the scientific method we talked about yesterday.

  6. Science is a Search for Knowledge https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zrzMhU_4m-g

  7. Steps of the Scientific Method 1. Observations. Make Observations using your 5 senses. Which senses are missing? • 2. Research question. Observations make us ask testablequestions about what we experience.

  8. Testable Questions have • A manipulated variable (Independent variable) • A responding variable (Dependent variable)

  9. Testable Question Formats manipulated variable responding variable • Does changing _______ affect _______? • How does changing _____ affect _____? • If I change ______ will it affect ______? • What is the effect of ______ on _______? responding variable manipulated variable manipulated variable responding variable manipulated variable responding variable

  10. Is this question testable? Which brand of shoe makes you run faster Nike or New Balance? How can we make it testable? What is the independent variable? What is the dependent variable? What is the new testable question?

  11. Change the following into testable questions • What affects plant growth? • What makes dishes clean? • Can water boiling time be changed? • Does carbon dioxide in the atmosphere cause the atmosphere to warm? • Is achievement in school higher when students are tested frequently?

  12. Schedule • First Five • Continue Scientific Method Notes • Finish Testable questions/hypothesis • GQ: How do I determine the significant parts of the scientific method? • HW: Lab Notebook - Monday • Variable Practice wkst – Due Fri First Five 9/16 • Turn the following non-testable question into a testable question. How does a paper airplane fly? 2. Take out sunsets, souls, and senses. 3. Collect work from center of room.

  13. 3. Hypothesis • A hypothesis is a possible explanation that is based on observation and seeks to answer the question. • Write it as an “If…(I do this) then…(this is what I think will happen)” statement. • Must include both the independent and dependent variables.

  14. 3. Hypothesis Ex: “If the gene for glowing is inserted into a plant, then the plant will produce the glowing trait.”

  15. Create Hypotheses for the following • Does changing the type of liquid affect how quickly a nail will corrode (rust)? • Does the brand of detergent affect how thoroughly it gets a grass stain out? • How does the type of light affect how quickly a plant will grow? • Does surface temperature of a glass affect fingerprints? • Do artificial sugars attract ants?

  16. Schedule • First Five • Practice Procedure writing • Set up Radish Lab • GQ: How do I determine the significant parts of the scientific method? • HW: • 1. Lab Notebook - Monday • 2. Variable Practice wkst – Due Tomorrow • 3. Read pages 1-17 and answer Critical Thinking Questions at the end of each section – due Monday • 4. Safety Quiz Corrections – due tomorrow First Five 9/17 • Write a hypothesis for the following question. • What is the effect of pH on the lifespan of tadpoles? 2. Pick up work from middle of room.

  17. 4. Experiment Definition = A controlled test of a hypothesis is called an experiment. • A valid experiment needs: 1. Independent variable 2. Dependent variable 3. Control group 4. Easy to follow Procedure

  18. Independent Variable • What happens when a fire fly gene (the independent variable) is added to tobacco plant genes?

  19. Controlled Experiment • One test group (the control group) is not exposed to the tested effect (gene for glowing). • One test group (independent variable) is exposed to the tested effect (gene for glowing).

  20. The Control Group • Keep an identical control group for comparison. • This plant did not receive the fire fly gene. • It’s a control.

  21. Schedule • First Five • Set up Radish Lab • GQ: How do I set up a valid experiment? • HW: • 1. Lab Notebook - Monday • 2. Variable Practice wkst – Due Today • 3. Read pages 1-17 and answer Critical Thinking Questions at the end of each section – due Monday • 4. Safety Quiz Corrections – due today First Five 9/18 • What is the independent and dependent variables for your radish lab? 2. Turn in Variable practice and safety corrections to box. 3. Pick up work from middle of room.

  22. Schedule • First Five • Pre lab Practice • GQ: How do I design a valid scientific experiment? • HW: • 1. Lab Notebook - Today • 2. Reading and Critical Thinking Questions – Due Today • 3. Tutor Sessions • Today and Wednesday First Five 9/21 • Make a list of good and bad things about the following table.

  23. Schedule • First Five • Prelab practice • GQ: How do I design a valid experiment? • HW: • Lab Notebook – Tomorrow • 2. Tutor Sessions Wednesday • 3. Observation Article – Due Thursday First Five 9/22 • If you were to graph this table what axis would pH and # of tadpoles go? • Take out your Radish Lab and collect measurements for today.

  24. Schedule • First Five • Radish Lab Finish • Grub Lab • GQ: How do I design and run an experiment? • HW: • Radish Lab – Due Tuesday • Grub Lab – Due Fri 10/2 • SciMeth and Char of Life Test – Fri 10/2 First Five 9/25 • What happened in your radish seed experiment?

  25. 5. Results The observations or measurements in the experiment depend on the independent variable and are called the dependent variable. The dependent variable here is whether the resulting plants will glow or not. It depends on the gene (independent variable).

  26. 5. Results • The dependent variable measured during the experiment becomes data. • Data is evidence to support the hypothesis. Data must be observable or measurable in someway. • Data cannot be an opinion or emotion.

  27. Data • Look at data for patterns and trends. • Data is put into graphs and charts to make patterns more visible. • Only data is used to support your conclusions!

  28. Schedule • First Five • Conclusion Activity • Conclusion Notes • GQ: How do I determine the significant parts of the scientific method? • HW: • Lab Notebook – Wednesday • IV and DV Study session • Today and Tomorrow from 2:10 – 3:00 First Five 9/16 • What are the three things that must be included in a conclusion?

  29. 6. Conclusions • Conclusions are only valid if data supports them. • Reject the hypothesis if the data does not support the hypothesis. • Data supports or not; it does NOT prove anything.

  30. Conclusions cont’... • Error Analysis is part of an experiment. • List only KNOWN errors in the measurements. • DO NOT list your guesses (e.g. “We might have....).

  31. Schedule • First Five • Grub Lab • GQ: How do I make quality observations and create testable questions from them? • HW: • Lab Notebook – Today • IV and DV Study session • Today from 2:10 – 3:00 • 3. Observation Article – due Tomorrow First Five 9/23 • What are five detailed observations of this room? • Measure your radishes.

  32. Quantitative • There are nine dolphins in this pod • Dolphins eat the equivalent of 4-5 percent of their body mass each day • The sonar frequency most often used by the dolphins is around 100kHz Qualitative Dolphin color ranges from gray to white. Dolphins in a pod engage in play behavior Dolphins have smooth skin

  33. Schedule • First Five • Grub Lab • GQ: How do I design and run an experiment? • HW: • 1. Observation Article – Due Today First Five 9/24 • What is one thing you noticed about the grubs? • Turn in your Observation wkst. • Measure your radishes.

  34. THE GRUBBY GRUB LABMYP Style Background Observations: Make careful observations of your grubs and their behavior on the 3rd page of your lab notebook. List at least 10. • Possible Environmental Factors: Given the materials supplied by the teacher, list 5 possible environmental factors that you could alter that might affect the grubs. • Research Questions: Write 5 possible testable research questions that you could investigate with a valid scientific experiment. Circle the research question that you want to investigate.

  35. Schedule • First Five • Grub Lab • GQ: How do I design and run an experiment? • HW: • 1. SciMeth Test Review – due Wed 9/24 • 2. Test pkt and Test – due Thurs 9/25 • 3. Grub Lab – Due Thurs First Five 9/22 • When you graph your data what variable goes on the x-axis? The y-axis?

  36. Theory • When many hypotheses have a large body of data and support they are unified into a Theory. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GUQUqV0_PTc

  37. Schedule • First Five • Grub Lab • GQ: How do I design and run an experiment? • HW: • Radish Lab – Due tomorrow • SciMeth Test Review – due Thursday • 2. Test pkt and Test – due Fri 10/2 • 3. Grub Lab – Due Fri 10/2 First Five 9/28 • What are your independent and dependent variables for your grub lab?

  38. Schedule • First Five • Grub Lab • GQ: How do I design and run an experiment? • HW: • Radish Lab – Due today • SciMeth Test Review – due Thursday • 2. Test pkt and Test – due Fri 10/2 • 3. Grub Lab – Due Mon 10/5 First Five 9/29 • If I wanted to know what light does to grubs, what are my IV, DV, Control, and constants for my experiment? • Turn in your Radish Lab to the box

  39. Schedule • First Five • Grub Lab Final Draft • GQ: How do I design and run an experiment? • HW: • 1. SciMeth Test Review – due Tomorrow • 2. Test pkt and Test – due Thurs 9/25 • 3. Grub Lab – Due Thurs First Five 9/23 • Which parts of your grub lab do you think should receive the most points?

  40. Schedule • First Five • Review • Grub Lab Final Draft • GQ: How do I design and run an experiment? • HW: • 1. SciMeth Test Review – due Today • 2. Test pkt and Test – due Tomorrow 9/25 • 3. Grub Lab – Due Friday First Five 9/24 • Take out your SciMeth Test review and write down any questions you still have about the scientific method. • Pick up graded papers.

  41. Schedule • First Five • Metric System Review Lab • 3. Finish Yeast lab write-up • 4. Work on Pre-lab Practice • GQ: How do I use the metric system accurately? • HW: Yeast lab – Due Today • Pre-Lab Practice – due tomorrow First Five 9/23 • What is the metric system? • What is the range of a graduated cylinder? • What does each line represent on a graduated cylinder?

  42. Schedule • First Five • Bean Lab Set-up • GQ: How do I use the Scientific method to set up an experiment on Beans? • HW: • Pre-Lab Practice – due today • Bean Lab – Due Fri. • Review – Due Mon • Packet – Due Tues • SciMeth Test – Due Tues 10/1 First Five 9/24 • If Ms. K were to give you an irregular shaped pebble and a graduated cylinder, describe (in complete sentences) how you would go about finding the volume of the pebble. • Turn in your Pre-Lab Practice to the box

  43. Data Table 2: Bean Mass

  44. Schedule • First Five • Bean Lab Day 1 • Clean up • GQ: How do I use the Scientific method to set up an experiment on Beans? • HW: • Bean Lab – Due Fri. • Review – Due Mon • Packet – Due Tues • SciMeth Test – Due Tues 10/1 First Five 9/25 • How many different types of measurements are you taking in the bean lab? • What are the units you are using for each?

  45. Schedule • First Five • Bean Lab Day 2 • Clean up • GQ: How do I use the Scientific method to perform an experiment on Beans? • HW: • Bean Lab – Due Tomorrow • Review – Due Mon • Packet – Due Tues • SciMeth Test – Due Tues 10/1 First Five 9/26 • When you are done with this lab, how many paragraphs should be in your conclusion section?

  46. Schedule • First Five • Bean Lab Write up fine tuning • Work on review • GQ: How do I write a complete MYP lab experiment on Beans? • HW: • Bean Lab – Due Monday • Review – Due Tues • Packet – Due Wed 10/2 • SciMeth Test – Due Wed 10/2 First Five 9/27 • Make a list of good and bad things about the following table.

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