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The Scientific Method: Scientific Questions

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Presentation on theme: "The Scientific Method: Scientific Questions"— Presentation transcript:

1 The Scientific Method: Scientific Questions
SNC1L The Scientific Method: Scientific Questions

2 The Scientific Method

3 Step 1 Define the Question

4 Step 2 Gather Information and Resources
(Has anyone else worked on the question before? What did they discover?)

5 Step 3 Form a Hypothesis A hypothesis is a prediction.

6 Step 3 A hypothesis is not just a guess. It is based on the information gathered.

7 Step 4 Perform Experiment and Collect Data

8 Step 5 Analyze Data (often using graphs)

9 Step 6 Draw Conclusions

10 Scientific Questions A scientific question is any question that can be answered using the scientific method (by experiment or observation).

11 Scientific Questions A scientific question is any question that can be answered using the scientific method (by experiment or observation). “What is the meaning of life” is not a scientific question.

12 Scientific Questions A scientific question is any question that can be answered using the scientific method (by experiment or observation). “Is there life on Mars?” is a scientific question. It can be answered by experiment or observation.

13 “Is there life on Mars?” To design an experiment, however, we need to come up with a more specific question. We would need to think about how we would test for life.

14 “Is there methane on Mars?”
For example, methane is an unstable gas that is produced by biological processes. Significant levels of methane in the Martian atmosphere would be evidence that there may be life.

15 Paper Helicopters We are going to construct paper helicopters. What scientific questions could we ask about the helicopters?

16 “Better” What is the problem with the question, “Does the lighter paper or the heavier paper work better?”

17 “Better” What is the problem with the question, “Does the lighter paper or the heavier paper work better?” “Better” is too subjective. It’s not measureable.

18 “Better” What is the problem with the question, “Does the lighter paper or the heavier paper work better?” “Better” is too subjective. It’s not measureable. How about, “Does the lighter paper or the heavier paper take longer to fall?”


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