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Academia Americana Science Fair 2011-2012

Academia Americana Science Fair 2011-2012. If you have not turned this in yet, please do so. You can find this document in http://aamathscience.tripod.com/. On Your Display Board:. Experiment Oral Presentation On Paper: Logbook Abstract Brochure. Objectives Hypotheses Materials

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Academia Americana Science Fair 2011-2012

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  1. Academia Americana Science Fair 2011-2012

  2. If you have not turned this in yet, please do so. You can find this document in http://aamathscience.tripod.com/

  3. On Your Display Board: • Experiment • Oral Presentation • On Paper: • Logbook • Abstract • Brochure • Objectives • Hypotheses • Materials • Procedure • Observations/Data Charts • Pictures • Conclusions • Applications

  4. Additional Display Board Stuff • Data: • Background Research of Project • Charts and/or graphs • Pictures: • Photos of team performing the experiment • Samples: -It is recommended that you present samples of your result or work. (i.e. plants, or whatever you created in your experiment). ALL materials must be present on the table (or on the floor, depending on their size).

  5. The Scientific Method • The scientific method is a way to ask and answer scientific questions by making observations and doing experiments. The steps of the scientific method are to: • Ask a Question • Do Background Research • Construct a Hypothesis • Test Your Hypothesis by Doing an Experiment • Analyze Your Data and Draw a Conclusion • Communicate Your Results

  6. Objectives Objectives must answer the following questions: • What do you want to do? • What do you plan to achieve with this project? • How do you intend to apply this project in real life?

  7. Hypotheses • After having thoroughly researched your question, you should have some educated guess about how things work. This educated guess about the answer to your question is called the hypothesis. • The hypothesis must be worded so that it can be tested in your experiment. • Express the hypothesis using your independent variable (the variable you change during your experiment) and your dependent variable (the variable you observe-changes in the dependent variable depend on changes in the independent variable).

  8. Materials • The materials section must include a list of all the materials used in your project. • Materials must be listed accurately, in bullet-form, with measurements in S.I. units.

  9. Procedure • The procedure must be detailed account of the steps taken to prepare and perform the experiment. However, at the time of the oral presentation, it is not necessary to memorize and spell out the entire procedure, as this may be quite time-consuming. • If any terminology is used, please clarify.

  10. Important! • It is highly recommended that your perform AT LEAST two trials of your experiment, and record observations for ALL of your trials. The greater the number of trials, the more credible and solid your results.

  11. Variables • The independent variable is the one variable the investigator chooses to change. • Controlled variables are variables that are kept the same each time. • The dependent variable is the variable that changes as a result of/or in response to the independent variable.

  12. OBSERVATIONS • Record the development of your experiment. • Organize your observations into tables, charts, or graphs. • Keep a record of ALL your observations in your logbook. *The logbook will be your project diary, where you record the development and outcomes of all your trials.

  13. Conclusions • Conclusions must answer the original testable question proposed at the beginning of the investigation. • Conclusions should explain how the students used science process to develop an accurate answer. • You should have two or three conclusion in response to your initial objectives.

  14. APPLICATIONS • The application of the project states how the outcome of the project can be used in real life. • There must be a minimum of 2 applications.

  15. Abstract • An abstract is an abbreviated version of your science fair project final report. It is limited to a maximum of 250 words. The science fair project abstract appears at the beginning of the report. • An abstract should have the following five pieces: • Introduction. This is where you describe the purpose for doing your science fair project or invention. Why should anyone care about the work you did? You have to tell them why. Did you explain something that should cause people to change the way they go about their daily business? If you made an invention or developed a new procedure how is it better, faster, or cheaper than what is already out there? Motivate the reader to finish the abstract and read the entire paper or display board.

  16. Problem Statement. Identify the problem you solved or the hypothesis you investigated. • Procedures. What was your approach for investigating the problem? Don't go into detail about materials unless they were critical to your success. Do describe the most important variables if you have room. • Results. What answer did you obtain? Be specific and use numbers to describe your results. Do not use vague terms like "most" or "some." • Conclusions. State what your science fair project or invention contributes to the area you worked in. Did you meet your objectives? For an engineering project state whether you met your design criteria.

  17. BROCHURE • In Microsoft Publisher • Include: • Project Name • Grade and Category • Group Members • Brief summary of project • Conclusions • Application • Pictures / Diagrams

  18. 2011-2012 SciTeam • Coordinator: Nipuni Gomes • 7 A -Jesus Ortega • 7 B - Rodrigo Fajardo • 7 C - Johanna Mejia • 8 A- NoorCanahuati • 8 B -July Quan • 9 A -Ivan Milla • 9 B- Sara Urso • 10 A –NathaliaIllin • 10 B- Kevin Mejia • 10 C -Nicole Nuñez • 11 A- Ferdinando Falk • 11 B -Gabriela Granillo • 11 C- Roger Puerto 

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