280 likes | 411 Vues
The Problem. 1. Identify a problem 2. May be something you have observed 3. You wonder why it happens. Purpose 1. 1 -3 sentences that explains why you are doing this investigation 2. Should state what benefit will be gained from answering the experimental question
E N D
The Problem 1. Identify a problem 2. May be something you have observed 3. You wonder why it happens
Purpose 1. 1 -3 sentences that explains why you are doing this investigation 2. Should state what benefit will be gained from answering the experimental question 3. “The purpose of this project is . . . “
The Question 1. Experiment is designed to answer the question. 2. Must be answered with measurable data collected during the experiment 3. Is not based on opinion or a survey 4. Must contain the Dependent and Independent Variable
Variables 1. Anything in an experiment that can change. 2. Only two variable should change: 1. one on purpose 2. one as a result 3. All other variable must remain the same - controlled
Independent Variable • What you change on purpose in an experiment to see if it makes a difference. • The whole point of the experiment • Independent I changed it Dependent Variable • What changes in an experiment because of the independent variable. • What you are measuring – the data • Dependent Data Controlled Variables • All other aspect of an experiment must remain the same.
Identify the Variables Underline the independent variable and circle the dependent variable. 1. Will Bounty or Gala absorb more water? Will Bounty or Galaabsorb more water? Controlled: same size paper towel same amount of water equal time of towel in water
2. Does flake or chunk shaped cereal absorb more milk? Does flake or chunk shaped cerealsabsorb more milk? Controlled: same amount of milk same amount of cereal same type bowls
3. Will nail polish dry faster under a light or a fan? Will nail polish dry faster under a light or a fan? Controlled: Same amount of exposure to light and fan Same type of nail polish Same amount of polish: 1 or 2 coats
Hypothesis 1. States a proposed solution to a scientific problem 2. Should answer the problem question 3. Must contain both the Independent and Dependent Variable. 4. Must be written with an If. . . then,. . . statement
Hypothesis Practice • 1. Will Bounty or Gala absorb more water? IfBounty and Gala are placed in water, then Bounty will absorb more water. • 2. Does flake or chunk shaped cereal absorb more milk? Ifflake and chunk shaped cereal is placed in milk, then flake shaped will absorb more milk. • 3. Will nail polish dry faster under a light or a fan? Ifnail polish is placed under a light and a fan, then the polish under the light will dry faster.
Which can go faster a motorcycle or a car? If a motorcycle or a car is driven, then a motorcycle will go faster. Which water evaporates fastersalt water or fresh water?
Procedures • All steps to do the experiment • All steps must be numbered • Include: labeling, brands, types, amounts, units, and sizes • Include repeat steps if appropriate • Should have at least 3 trials • Gathering materials is not part of the procedures • Anyone should be able to perform this experiment with the procedures.
Question: Will Bounty or Gala paper towels absorb more water? • Cut one Bounty paper towel into a 20 x 20 cm square • Place the paper towel into the square metal cake pan • Pour 100 mL of water onto the paper towel in the metal cake pan • Let paper towel sit in water for 30 seconds • Hold the paper towel by two corners and lift it out of the water • Let paper towel drip for 30 seconds • Throw paper towel away • Pour water left in the metal cake pan into a beaker • Determine amount absorbed: subtract amount of water left from 100 mL • Record the amount absorbed on the data table • Repeat steps 1-10 two more times with Bounty paper towels • Repeat steps 1 – 11 with Gala Towels
Procedure Practice 2. Does flake or chunk shaped cereal absorb more milk? 3. Will nail polish dry faster under a light or a fan?
Material Lists 1. List all materials and equipment used in experiment 2. Include: brands, types, amounts, units, and sizes 3. Use only metric measurements
Example Material List Question: Will Bounty or Galaabsorb more water? 3 – 20 x 20 cm squares each: Bounty and Gala paper towels 1 pair of scissors 250 mL beaker 600 mL water 20*C 1 - 20 x 20 cm sq metal cake pan 1 - Celsius thermometer 1 - Clock with second hand Underline the brands, types, amounts, units, and sizes
Example 3 –squares each: Bounty and Gala paper towels 1 pair of scissors 250mLbeaker 600mL water 20*C 1 - 20 x 20 cm sq metal cake pan 1 - Celsius thermometer 1 - Clock with second hand
Material List Practice Select the question you wrote procedures for and write a material list 2. Does flake or chunk shaped cereal absorb more milk? 3. Will nail polish dry faster under a light or a fan?
Data Tables 1. Used to collect data from experiment 2. Columns and rows must be labeled 3. May contain a row for a total or average 4. Have a main title = what’s on the graph
Graphing Two main types of graphs BAR: used to compare – data that does not occur in a continuous manner LINE: data that occurs in a continuous manner
Graph Construction Title: short description of data being displayed, each axis also needs a title Horizontal Axis: independent variable Vertical Axis: dependent variable Spacing: evenly placed across both horizontal and vertical axes
Paper Towel Absorbency Water Absorbed (mL) Paper Towels
Graph Practice The following data was collected during an experiment with the question: Will chunk or flake cereal absorb more milk?
Graph Practice Will chunk or flack cereal absorb more milk?
Conclusion 1. Examine all of your data: charts and graphs 2. Ask yourself questions??? • Were the results expected – how were they different • Any problems or occurrences that effected the outcome • Did you collect enough data/have enough
Conclusion 3. State what your results were – include data numbers 4. Was your hypothesis supported or refuted 5. Describe any problems or unusual events 6. What should be done differently 7. Revised hypothesis if needed.
Conclusion If chunk and flake cereal are placed in milk, then chunk cereal will absorb more milk. Our group preformed an experiment to find out which type of cereal absorbed more milk. We used chunk and flake cereal and 2% milk to perform the experiment. The experimental results showed us that chunk cereal absorbed 39.5 mL of milk while the flake cereal absorbed 30 mL of milk. This data shows that chunk cereal absorbs more milk than flake therefore, our hypothesis was supported. The experiment proceeded as expected and no problems occurred.