The Scientific Method List as many steps as you can of the scientific method.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Introduction to Scientific Method: REVIEW:Observation and Data
Advertisements

Science is… A way of investigating the world around us and making predictions based on our knowledge.
An organized set of investigation procedures
Remember write today’s date Warm-up How do you solve problems in your life? List the steps in the scientific method and compare them to how you solve problems.
Scientific Method Review Game.
The Scientific Method. Steps of the Scientific Method Steps of the Scientific Method 1.State the Question- based on an observation.
Scientific Method Biology 1B Mrs. Yanac. Process to Solve Problems 1.Ask a Question / Identify a Problem 2.Research 3.Make a Hypothesis 4.Design an Experiment.
Scientific Method Review
Identifying Variables
Scientific Method.
Simpsons & SpongeBob Practice
Identifying Variables
Scientific Method Bell Work 8/25/14
Scientific Method.
Identify the Controls and Variables: Smithers
Using the Scientific Method
The Scientific Method Meets the Simpsons
Controls and Variables
Scientific Method Stations. Can I create an experiment to find the answer? Does it provide data to be measured? Is it answered with a yes or no? 1.Which.
Identifying Variables
Science Communication LOLO Session 8 Reflections on the Nature of Science.
False Assumptions
What are the “skills” used in science to solve problems or answer questions?
Experiments with the Simpsons and Sponge Bob:
List as many steps as you can of the scientific method.
Scientific Inquiry and the Scientific Method The Way Cool Way Science is Done.
September 1 st – Welcome Back! Learning Outcomes  Be able to make an observation and inference  Spark curiosity in science TO DO List (5 min)  Pick.
Bell Work 9/4/2014 A group of students is conducting an experiment to see how light affects the growth of tomato plants. The group has three separate tomato.
Scientific Method Unit 1A. Observation Recognizing or noting facts about a specific instance Recognizing or noting facts about a specific instance.
Scientific Method.
Scientific Procedure What is an “independent variable”?
Experimental Design What is an “independent variable”? What is a “dependent variable”? What is a “control variable”?
Science Of Life Unit 1. The Scientific Method We use the Scientific Method, a series of investigative steps, to solve problems.
Mr. Krabbs wants to make Bikini Bottoms a nicer place to live
Objective: What is the application of the scientific method?
WARM-UP Warm-Up # 1 Where should I keep my science textbook? At your home.
WARM-UP Warm-Up # 1 Where should I keep my science textbook? At your home.
PERCEPTION IS NOT ALWAYS REALITY. SOME NATURAL FALSE ASSUMPTIONS OF PAST AND PRESENT We are the center of the universe Stars are on the surface.
Unit I: Understanding Science What is Science? Science: understanding the world by observation and problem solving—“doing”
Termite Project Mrs. Lang Biology – 6 th period. Background Research Look at your list of observations and questions you wrote Friday Research with the.
The Scientific Method Logical & orderly approach to scientific research.
The Simpsons & the Scientific Method. Smithers thinks that a special juice will increase the productivity of workers. He creates two groups of 50 workers.
Inference vs. evidence. Evidence is what you know for sure. Evidence comes from direct observations or experiments. Inference is what you assume or guess.
Solve the Mystery Faulty Reasoning.
Simpsons Experimental Design
Scientific Method Review Mrs. Breeding 6 th Grade.
Write this in your table of contents and then set up a page for it. Friday 9/16 Date Activity Page 9/16 Perceptions and Assumptions.
Friday 9/17 Perceptions and Assumptions Date Activity Page 9/17 Perceptions and Assumptions.
Quick Write What is a control group?.
Scientific Method Problem/Purpose Hypothesis Experiment Controls Variables Constants Materials Procedure Data and Observations Analysis Conclusion Theory.
Designing investigations © By Dr ᅲ Rat. In any experiment….. …always change only ONE thing at a time. If you change two things, you will not know what.
What is Science??. Brainstorm in groups Science is an organized way of using evidence to learn about the natural world Science is an organized way of.
Scientific Inquiry and the Scientific Method The Way Cool Way Science is Done.
False Assumptions Are you making them?.
Simpson’s Scientific Method
Perception is not always reality… Illusions and misconceptions
Krusty Krabs Breath Mints
Scientific Method Problem/Purpose Hypothesis Experiment Controls
#7 Variables Practice Stations
Learning Goal: Recognize and apply the steps of the scientific method
Scientific Method Ms. Drake
Independent and Dependent Variables
Identifying Controls and Variables
Bell Ringer-Key Concept Questions
The Scientific Method Short Video: click on picture.
WHAT IS SCIENCE? Science is… A way to provide explanations and make
Controls and Constants
Homer notices that his shower is covered in a strange green slime
Steps of the Scientific Method.
Presentation transcript:

The Scientific Method List as many steps as you can of the scientific method.

Observatio n State Problem HypothesisExperimentResultsConclusion

Which of the statements in number 1 are observations? How are the observation statements different from the other statements?

Observation – using your senses to gather information Two Types Qualitative: involves characteristics/descriptions of the observation (color and texture) Quantitative: involves numbers (usually used to make graphs) = Data

Observation Statements 1.The cabinets are brown. 2. It is sunny outside. 3.There are 12 girls and 10 boys in the room. 4.Some of the windows are open Which observations from #1 are Qualitative? Quantitative?

Inference logical interpretation based on knowledge and experience

Let’s list some observations about the pic below…

Turn to the back of wkst… Read the 14 statements and write O or I on the line. Hint: Feelings and emotions are on the inside. You can not see what is on the inside without further investigation!

Sniffy and Fluffy Have an Adventure Created by Aimée Bruneau & Illustration by Taylour Damion

In your notebook, write down what you think the story will be about based on these pictures. Let's Read the Story!

In your notebook, answer these questions… 1.Were your hypotheses correct? 2.If so, what observations led you to those hypotheses? 3.If not, what misled you? 4.At what point in the story did you realize that your hypotheses were correct/incorrect?

In your notebook… Make a prediction as to what you think you’ll do after school today.

Making Inferences 8/19/10 Scientific Methods

Story #1 There is a cabin on the side of a mountain. Three people are inside and they are dead. How did they die? Answer: They were killed in a plane crash. The three people were the pilot, co-pilot and navigator. They crashed in a snow storm. False Assumption: The cabin was a mountain cabin. It was actually the cabin of a jetliner.

Story #2 It is a hot August afternoon. The location is the living room in an old Victorian mansion. The 7-foot window is open and the curtains are blowing in the breeze generated by the thunderstorm that just passed. On the floor lie the bodies of Barack and Michelle. They are surrounded by puddles of water and broken glass. Please close your eyes and picture the scene. Now change the picture. Neither Barack nor Michelle has any clothing on. How did they die? Answer: They suffocated. The storm winds blew open the window, which knocked their fish bowl off the table, and it crashed to the floor. False Assumption: That Barack and Michelle are human. They are actually pet goldfish.

Story #3 A man is walking down the street, sees a bar and enters. He asks the bartender for a glass of water. The bartender pulls out a gun and points it at him. The man says “Thank You” and leaves the bar. What happened? Answer: The man who asked for the glass of water had the hiccups. The bartender pulled the gun to scare the hiccups away. False Assumption: The bartender pulled the gun in order to kill the man.

Story #4 A woman leaves home and makes three left turns. She returns home again. On the way, she passed two women with masks. Who were the two women? Answer: The umpire and the catcher. False Assumption: That the woman was walking on city streets. She really is on a baseball field.

Story #5 A man and his son were rock climbing on a particularly dangerous mountain when they slipped and fell. The man was killed, but the son lived and was rushed to a hospital. The old surgeon looked at the young man and declared, "I can't operate on this boy: he is my son.“ How can this be? Answer: The old surgeon was the boy‘s mother False Assumption: That the surgeon was a man.

Story #6 Preston and his men searched the frozen tundra for escaped convict Ben Barker. Just as they were about to give up, one of Preston's men spotted a body. Barker was found lying dead in the snow. There were no tracks leading to or from the body. The cause of death was partially due to the unopened pack on his back. Barker did not die of thirst, hunger, or cold. What was in Barker's pack that led to his death? Answer: An unopened parachute. False Assumption: That Barker’s “pack” was a backpack, not a parachute pack. Also, he had arrived there somehow by land, not by air.

Story #7 Two train tracks run parallel to each other, except for a short distance where they meet and become one track over a narrow bridge. One morning, a train speeds onto the bridge. Another train coming from the opposite direction, also speeds onto the bridge. Neither train can stop on the short bridge, yet there is no collision. How is this possible? Answer: The trains were crossing the bridge at different times of the morning. False Assumption: Sounds like the two trains had arrived there at the same time; it was just the same morning.

Story #8 Justin Summers owns a vacation house in northern Ontario which has an A-shaped roof. One side of the roof faces north and the other side faces south. The prevailing winds from the north are usually quite strong. The strange thing is that the stronger the north wind blows, the stronger the resulting updraft on the south side of the roof. Therefore, if a rooster was to lay an egg on the peak of the roof during a strong northerly wind, on which side should the egg fall most of the time? Answer: Roosters don't lay eggs. False Assumption: That the rooster, being a chicken, was a hen.

Story #9 There is an ancient invention still used in some parts of the world today that allows people to see through walls. What is it? Answer: Windows. False Assumption: The walls are totally solid and opaque. The walls are not part of a house. Somehow, windows weren’t “invented”. Windows aren’t that ancient. “Some parts of the world” means only a few places, not commonly found.

Story #10 Sly Hand, the famous magician, claims he can tell the score of any football game before it even starts. Many think he is psychic and possesses supernatural powers. How is it that he can be accurate about the score 99 percent of the time? Answer: There really is no magic. The score of any football game before it starts is always “zero to zero”. False Assumption: That the “score” was the final score. Also, we don’t assume any score exists before the game begins.

Make observations in your notebook about this bag of skittles.

Observations

Question

Hypothesis

Good & Bad Experiments Controlled Experiments

I. Experiments A. Good: Controlled Only one variable is different between groups B. Bad: Non- controlled More than one variable is different between groups

II. Experimental Groups A. Controlled Group –The group that does not receive the treatment B. Experimental Group –The group that receives the treatment

Mr. Krabbs wants to make Bikini Bottoms a nicer place to live. He has created a new sauce that he thinks will reduce the production of body gas associated with eating crabby patties from the Krusty Krab. He recruits 100 customers with a history of gas problems. 50 of them eat crabbies with the new sauce. The other 50 eat crabby patties with a mixture of mayonnaise and food coloring which looks like the new sauce. They were also told this sauce was the new sauce, which is said to reduce gas production. Two hours later, 30 customers in group A (new sauce) had fewer gas problems and 8 customers in group B (fake new sauce) had fewer gas problems. –Control Group? –Experimental Group? –Conclusion?

III. Variables A. Manipulated Variable –T–The one condition that is different between the groups B. Controlled Variable –A–All the conditions that are the same between the groups

Francesco Redi’s Spontaneous Generation Experiment

Sponge Bob notices that his friend Gary is suffering from slimotosis, which occurs when the shell develops a nasty slime and gives off a horrible odor. His friend Patrick tells him that rubbing seaweed on the shell is the perfect cure, while Sandy says that drinking Dr. Kelp will be a better cure. Sponge Bob decides to test this cure by rubbing Gary with seaweed for 1 week and having him drink Dr. Kelp. After a week of treatment, the slime is gone and Gary’s shell smells better. –Controlled Variable –Manipulated Variable

Smithers thinks a special juice will increase the productivity of workers. He creates two groups of 50 workers each and assigns each group the same task of stapling papers. Group A is given the special juice to drink while they work. Group B is not given the special juice. After an hour, Smithers counts how many stacks of papers each group has made. Group A made 1,587 stacks. Group B made 2,113 stacks. –Control Group? –Manipulated Variable? –Conclusion? How could this experiment be improved?

Krusty was told that a certain itching powder was the newest, best thing on the market. It even claims to cause 50% longer lasting itches. Interested in this product, he buys the itching powder and compares it to his usual product. One test subject (A) is sprinkled with the original itching powder and another test subject (B) was sprinkled with the Experimental itching powder. Subject A reported having itches for 30 minutes. Subject B reported having itches for 45 minutes. –Control Group? –Manipulated Variable? –Explain whether the data supports the claims.

Step 1: Draw edges of graph Step 2- Label the x and y axis –If time is one of your categories, it ALWAYS goes on the x-axis!!! Step 3- Write “0” in the corner where the x and y axis meet Step 4- Choose a number interval each line will represent on each axis (NEXT STEPS SPECIFIC TO GRAPH TYPE!) Last step: give graph a descriptive title

1.Line Graphs Step 5 –Plot your data points Step 6- Connect the data points Most commonly used in science

TimeWater absorbed by roots (g/h) 8am2 10am5 12pm12 2pm17 4pm16 6pm10 8pm3

Favorite Animal Number of People Monkey Penguin Elephant Giraffe Snake