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BELLWORK : 8/16-17/12

BELLWORK : 8/16-17/12. Think of a question that you could answer through an experiment: What is the question? How would you setup the experiment?. Introduction to Science. 1 – The Nature of Science 2 – The Way Science Works 3 – Organizing Data. Online Textbook Access. Go to URL

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BELLWORK : 8/16-17/12

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  1. BELLWORK : 8/16-17/12 Think of a question that you could answer through an experiment: What is the question? How would you setup the experiment?

  2. Introduction to Science 1 – The Nature of Science 2 – The Way Science Works 3 – Organizing Data

  3. Online Textbook Access • Go to URL • http://my.hrw.com • Username • rcsps • Password • rutherford

  4. 1 – The Nature of Science

  5. Key Terms • Science – Knowledge obtained by observing natural events and conditions to learn facts, principles, laws • Technology – Application of science for practical purposes • Law – A descriptive statement or equation that predicts events under certain conditions • Theory – System of ideas explaining related observations and supported by evidence

  6. How Science Takes Place • A scientist may perform experiments to find a new aspect of the natural world, to explain a known phenomenon, to check the results of other experiments, or to test predictions of current theories • Examples – New materials for computer chips that make processing speeds/phones more advanced

  7. How Science Takes Place • Examples – TVs were built after the early cathode ray tubes were developed in the late 19th century

  8. Scientists Experiment • Answer questions by investigating • Sometimes these are old questions, sometimes new • Often, questions arise from observations • Investigate by designing/conducting experiments • Experimental results are confirmed ( repetition )

  9. Observe

  10. Branches of Science • Natural Science: Biological, Physical, Earth

  11. Working Together • Different branches of science work together, along with technology • Example: Applying newer computer-chip materials into actual designs ( Razr, self-cooled labtops )

  12. Laws & Theories – Always Tested • Laws allow predictions to be made about how a system will behave under given conditions • GRAVITY • Theories explain HOW a process takes place • PLATE TECTONICS

  13. Models • Mathematics is useful to describe events • Gravity has an equation

  14. Models • Models can represent physical events • Used in daily life • Hurricane trajectories • Weather predictions

  15. BELLWORK : 8/20/12 Which popcorn is the better deal?

  16. Last Week • Discussed the fundamental nature of science • Also worked on observation skills • Anyone observe something interesting over the weekend?

  17. Introduction to Science 1 – The Nature of Science 2 – The Way Science Works 3 – Organizing Data

  18. 2 – The Way Science Works

  19. Science Skills • Identifying problems • Planning experiments • Recording observations • Correctly reporting data

  20. Critical Thinking • Involves asking questions, making observations, and using logic • Surprise!!

  21. BELLWORK : 8/20/12 Which popcorn is the better deal? Discuss

  22. Units of Measurement • In your notes, list 5 you can think of. • Do these relate to length, mass, weight, time, volume

  23. Units of Measurement • Scientists use standard units of measure – SI System • Meters, grams, Seconds

  24. Units of Measurement • SI ( System Internationale ) used for consistency • Prefixes allow for easy converting • EXAMPLES: • m  km • kg  g • seconds  milliseconds

  25. Exit Pass – Unit Conversions • Study Guide – Pg 3 • Problem 3 • Remaining Time – Problems 1, 5 & 6

  26. Bellwork – 08/21/12 • Study Guide – Pg 3 • Problem 3 • Finished? – Questions 1, 5 & 6

  27. Help with # 1, pg 3 • Microscopes – magnify ( make larger ) small objects • Telescopes – magnify objects far away • Radio telescope – detect radio waves from objects • Spectroscopes – separate light into a rainbow • Ruler – finds length

  28. Key Terms • Variable – A factor changing in an experiment • Length – Measure of the straight-line distance between two points • Volume – The space occupied by an object • Mass – Amount of matter in an object • Weight – Amount of gravitational force on object

  29. Scientific Method – Use Colors!! • Notice there is more than time where you observe

  30. Are They The Same? • Are they the same? - Hypothesis • How can we test your hypothesis?

  31. Bellwork – 8/23/12 • Study Guide • Finish pg. 3 - #2 , #4

  32. Introduction to Science 1 – The Nature of Science 2 – The Way Science Works 3 – Organizing Data

  33. Presenting Scientific Data • Scientists use written reports and oral presentations • To share results • Organizing/Presenting this info is important

  34. Line Graphs • Show continuous changes • Time : Independent Variable (x-axis) • Doesn’t DEPEND on anything • Gas Volume : Dependent Variable (y-axis) • Depends on something else

  35. Demonstration • Gas-Producing Reaction • Lots of gas at first, then slows down • Adding Vinegar to Baking Soda makes CO2

  36. Bar Graphs • Compares similar data for different items or events

  37. Pie Chart Graphs • Shows parts of a whole ( or parts of 100% )

  38. Lab Activity – Motion Graphing • If we do not take this seriously or respect the equipment, we will not use this setup again

  39. Lab Activity – Motion Graphing • Each group goes to their station • One person logs into network/labtop • Open Logger Pro Software • Open file “01a Graph Matching”

  40. Procedure • Collect data by hitting green “Collect” button • You will hear Motion Detector “clicking” • You will also see data collected an graph

  41. Lab Activities • Turn the detector on and stand still in front of it • What do you see on a distance vs. time graph? • Repeat the test but slowly move away from the detector • What do you see?

  42. Lab Activities • Turn the detector on and move back and forth in front of it ( get far away, move closer ) • What do you see on a distance vs. time graph?

  43. GRADE - Graph • Setup a graph of distance vs time for a person • What would it look like if someone is moving away from these detectors at constant speed? • What type of graph is this ( line, bar, pie chart )?

  44. Bellwork - 08/27/12 • What does it mean to be precise? • QUIZ – Thursday ( 6th ) and Friday

  45. Precision & Accuracy • Precision: the exactness of a measurement • Accuracy: how close a measurement is to the true value

  46. Applying Precision - Accuracy • Scientists use significant figures to show precision of a measured quantity • Significant figure: Prescribed decimal place determining the amount of rounding-off when assessing the precision of a measurement • Round your answers to the correct significant figures

  47. LAB Activity - GRADE • Get 50 points for participation • If I see not participating in one way or the other – less than 50 points • Document on Projector Screen ( 1 / group )

  48. Bellwork - 08/29/12 • Think of the paper-wad toss we did yesterday. Would it be accurate, precise, neither, both in the following situation? • 4 made it in the basket, 1 landed far away • QUIZ – Thursday ( 6th ) and Friday ( 3rd, 5th, 7th )

  49. Significant Figures – Counting Rules • ALL non-zero digits are Significant • Leading and trailing zeros are not significant • 2500 and 0.000036 have TWO Significant Figures • Zeros in between Non-Zeros are significant • 2501 and 2003 have FOUR Significant Figures • Zeros after a decimal point ARE SIGNIFICANT • They do not begin the number • 25.00 and 15.10 have FOUR Significant Figures

  50. Chpt 1 Quiz • Key Terms • Scientific method • Branches of science • Metric conversions • units (length - meters, mass - grams, time - sec) • Types of graphs • Precision and accuracy

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