1 / 10

Variables and Developing a Hypothesis

Variables and Developing a Hypothesis. Variables. What is a variable?  When you vary something, you change it.  Variables are things that can change. Variables. There are three main types of variables: I ndependent D ependent C ontrolled 

thimba
Télécharger la présentation

Variables and Developing a Hypothesis

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. Variables and Developing a Hypothesis

  2. Variables • What is a variable?  • When you vary something, you change it.  • Variables are things that can change

  3. Variables • There are three main types of variables: • Independent • Dependent • Controlled  • Think about variables for a question such as, “Does a bean plant grow best in sun or shade?”

  4. Independent Variable • 1st: Identify the variable that will be changed. • “Does a bean plant grow best in sun or shade?” • The amount of light that the plant receives is changed. • This is the independent variable.

  5. Dependent Variable • 2nd: Figure out what will be measured.  • “Does a bean plant grow best in sun or shade?” • The amount that the plants grow is what is being measured, so this is the dependent variable.  • The amount that the plants grow depends on the amount of sun they get.  • The dependent variable depends on the independent variable.  • The independent variable is what you change, and the dependent variable is what happens because of the change. 

  6. Controlled Variable • The only way to get reliable results from this experiment is to make sure that all the other variables stay the same, or are controlled.  • There are many variables that would need to be controlled in this experiment.  • How much water each plant gets • What kind of soil the plants are in • Temperature of the air

  7. What is a hypothesis? • A good hypothesis is a statement that predicts how an experiment will turn out based on what you already know, and that proposes an explanation that can be tested. • Testable statement of a relationship

  8. What makes a good hypothesis? • Be a statement • NOT A HYPOTHESIS: “What will happen if I leave an ice cube on a plate for half an hour?” • Rewrite the question as an “If…, then…” statement • “If I leave an ice cube on a plate for one hour, then it will melt.”

  9. What makes a good hypothesis? • Be testable • Need to be able to observe and measure the results.  • “My dog will think brown is the best color” is not testable, because you cannot measure your dog’s opinion. 

  10. What makes a good hypothesis? • Fit existing observations • A good hypothesis should not contradict anything you have already observed or researched about the topic.  • The more information you take into account while constructing a hypothesis, the better it will be.

More Related