1 / 11

Scientific Method and Scientific Testing

Scientific Method and Scientific Testing. We use the scientific method to solve problems or answer questions. Steps of the Scientific Method. 1. Identify your problem/question. - Problem must be able to be tested scientifically. 2. Research your problem Scientists share information

hazina
Download Presentation

Scientific Method and Scientific Testing

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Scientific Method and Scientific Testing We use the scientific method to solve problems or answer questions.

  2. Steps of the Scientific Method • 1. Identify your problem/question. - Problem must be able to be tested scientifically. • 2. Research your problem • Scientists share information • Use reliable sources. • Identify bias in your research

  3. 3. Create a hypothesis. • An educated guess. • Usually an “if” “then” • Always based on research! • 4. Test your hypothesis scientifically

  4. Testing your hypothesis • Test as many trials as possible. • Quantify your data (use numbers) • Make everything in your test constant (the same) • Test data should be organized if possible

  5. Creating your test • Must contain an independentvariable • Also known as manipulated variable • Scientist changes this • Independent changes the dependentvariable • Also known as responding variable • Changes based on independent variable • Tests may contain a control group • group separated from the rest of the experiment where the independent variable being tested cannot influence the results • Often given a “placebo”, intended to deceive the recipient

  6. 5. Analyze your data • Don’t be biased! • Identify flaws in your test. • 6. Make your conclusion • Often, this identifies a new problem or changes your hypothesis. • Share results so that they can be retested, confirmed, etc. • Share results with others – scientific knowledge builds!

  7. Correlations • Correlations show cause and effect between two values. • If changing one value affects another value, there is a correlation between the two.

  8. Positive Correlation As one factor increases, the other factor increases. Or. As one factor decreases, The other also decreases.

  9. Negative Correlation As one factor increases, The other decreases. Or. As one factor decreases, The other one increases.

  10. No Correlation • There is no connection between one value increasing And the other value.

  11. How I want you to answer! • Name, describe and draw the correlation • Name it as positive negative or none. • Describe how one factor affects the other • Draw the chart that shows the correlation

More Related