1 / 38

TAMING THE TAKS TEST

TAMING THE TAKS TEST. Objective One . Nature of science Lab safety, first aid, respect for environment, eliminating bias Lab equipment Accuracy vs Precision Scientific Method Charts, graphs, tables, pictures. Safty Rules. Use only labeled materials. Read labels twice to make sure.

nile
Télécharger la présentation

TAMING THE TAKS TEST

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. TAMING THE TAKS TEST

  2. Objective One • Nature of science • Lab safety, first aid, respect for environment, eliminating bias • Lab equipment • Accuracy vs Precision • Scientific Method • Charts, graphs, tables, pictures

  3. Safty Rules • Use only labeled materials. • Read labels twice to make sure. • Know the procedure. • Ask about the MSDS if you are not familiar with the substance.

  4. Safety with Temperature Changes • Do not handle hot or cold containers. • Use the proper holder for the container. • When heating a substance, aim it away from everyone.

  5. Safety with Gases • Odors are tested by wafting. • Reactions which produce gases should be done in a fume hood. • Gases should be trapped only in a large volume container to provide for rapid expansion.

  6. Safety Equipment • Protective goggles are worn in lab at all times. • Non-ventilated are worn if contact lenses are worn. • Aprons should be worn when handling chemicals. • Follow MSDS for safe handling of all chemicals.

  7. A a series of small volumes of water to the acid while stirring B the acid to water slowly while stirring constantly C the acid to a small volume of water and then add more water D dilute sulfuric acid to a small volume of the concentrated acid I want you to remember A & W ROOTBEER always pour acid into water if you pour water into acid it will splash acid all over you 1 The safest way to dilute concentrated sulfuric acid is to add —

  8. Other Safety Tips That Might Be On The TAKS Test! • Do experiments only approved by the teacher! • If you have any questions, problems, or concerns ALWAYS ASK THE TEACHER! • Never eat or drink in lab! • Keep work area clean! • When using scapel, cut away from you!

  9. First Aid • Burns – apply cold water • Cuts & bruises – stop bleeding by direct pressure, apply cold compresses to bruises • Spill in eye and skin – flush with water, use eyewash or safety shower • Fainting – leave person lying down, loosen clothing

  10. Respect For The Environment • Clean up after yourself • Do not harm habitat

  11. Know Lab Equipment and What Each Piece of Equipment Does!Use Elmo!!!

  12. Tools for Measurement Clocks and stopwatches measure time. A balance is used to measure mass. A graduated cylinder, dropper, or volumetric flask is used to measure volume.

  13. Mass is in? Volume in? Length in? Grams Liters Meters Measuring Units – System Internationale

  14. Your turn! 10. Which of the following pieces of equipment would be most appropriate for measuring the volume of a marble A. B. C. D.

  15. The safest way to dilute concentrated sulfuric acid is to add . A. of water to the acid while stirring B. the acid to water slowly while stirring constantly C. the acid to a small volume of water and then add more water D. dilute sulfuric acid to a small volume of the concentrated acid. 5. The reason for wafting or fanning a small amount of chemical vapors toward the nose as a means to detect odors in a test tube is to A. rid experimental error from excessive loss of mass for reactants or products. B. avoid splashing chemicals into the face of any person. C. protect the respiratory tract against potentially harmful vapors. D. determine the relative strength of the odor before smelling directly. Safety and Equipment

  16. Accuracy – refers to how close measurements are to an actual result Precision – refers to how close measurements are to one another (repeatability – same answer) Accuracy vs Precision

  17. Another Look At Accuracy • This is when a measurement is closest to its true value. • Several thermometers reading exactly the same temperature would indicate good accuracy.

  18. Accuracy vs. Precision Which of the following will allow measurement of a liquid’s volume with the greatest precision? A 50 mL cylinder graduated in 1 mL increments B 50 mL cylinder graduated in 0.5 mL increments C 100 mL cylinder graduated in 1 mL increments D 200 mL cylinder graduated in 5 mL increments Answer: B

  19. 13 Four lab groups measured the volume of acid required to neutralize a standard solution of sodium hydroxide base. Which of the groups measured the volume with the highest precision?

  20. Scientific Method • Problem • Hypothesis • Experiment • Data • Conclusion

  21. Problem • What are you trying to solve? • Only one thing can be tested

  22. Hypothesis • “Educated guess” • Telling how one variable will effect another variable • What you think is the answer to your problem?

  23. 55 In an activity, a ball is dropped from a height of 100 cm onto five different materials. The rebound height of each drop is shown in the graph. Which of the following describes the hypothesis most likely being tested? A The mass of the ball affects the rebound height. B The material the ball is made of affects the rebound height. C The height the ball is dropped from affects the rebound height. D The surface the ball is dropped onto affects the rebound height. Read the labels on the graph or data table, they tell you what changed (x-axis) and what was measured (y-axis).

  24. Contains only one experimental variable, all other variables must be the same. All experiments must have a CONTROLLED GROUP = is one that participates in the experiment without the change being tested VARIABLES Independent – I change the thing the experimenter changes Dependent this changes after the independent changes Controlled (constant) all of these variables are the same (temp, soil, water, sunlight, etc…) Experiment

  25. DATA • Charts, Graphs, Tables • Compare & Contrast • Inference – an attempt to explain, interpret, or determine why distinguish between cause and effect • Predict Trends – look at numbers to decide if they are increasing, decreasing, or remaining the same • Evaluate – to examine and judge carefully

  26. Reading Tables and Graphs • When a question includes a table or graph, read it first, before the question. • Don’t just Look at it READ IT. • What is the Title, what is being measured or compared? What units (grams, mLs, minutes, years) are given? • Are the numbers or slope increasing, decreasing? • After reading the data, now read the question!

  27. Reading Graphs Always read the title. Read the x- & y-axis labels & UNITS. What is happening? As the pressure of oxygen increases, the % saturation is increased.

  28. Graph Types – Pie and Bar Pie Graphs are used to show parts of a whole and percent distributions. Bar Graphs show noncontinuous data such as number of males and females in each science class with different hair colors.

  29. Graphs – Line or Curves Line Graphs show continuous data like distance vs. time, acceleration, or plant growth over 6 weeks

  30. Data Trends Direct relationship means as one variable changes, the other changes in the same way.

  31. Other Data Trends • Inverse – when one goes up the other one goes down or as one goes down the other goes up. • Exponential – typical of uncontrolled growth of a population, is a J-shaped curve

  32. 30 A researcher determined the percentage of electrical energy transformed into different forms of energy by a toaster. The best way to communicate these results is to display the data using a — F histogram G circle graph H line graph J box-whisker graph

  33. 47 Which graph best shows the comparison of the elements to the total composition of the copper ore?

  34. This is noncontinuous data (not time or temperature or increasing forces) and it is in percentages. D is a pie graph which shows percentage parts of the whole!

  35. Conclusions must be based upon the data collected. Opinions are not to be included, however an inference based upon data and observations may be included to propose another type of experiment. Conclusions also should include an error analysis. What possible changes to the experiment are needed to improve results? Can the experiment be repeated with the same outcome? Conclusions - Summary of what happened – stating if your hypothesis was right or wrong

  36. 54 Which conclusion is best supported by the information in the diagram? F Volcanic eruptions were common in the area. G The area was once a marine environment. H Organisms in the area reproduced frequently. J Consumers once outnumbered producers in the area.

  37. 1 Which of the following conclusions is supported by these data? A Alertness is directly related to level of distraction. B Shuffling methods can affect alertness. C Alertness levels vary during the day. D Long periods of rest improve alertness.

  38. The farther away, the less photosynthesis and bubbles! 3 The picture shows an experiment designed to investigate biochemical activity in a water plant in a dark room. Over time, bubbles can be easily observed and counted as they escape from the funnel. The number of bubbles is an indicator of the rate of photosynthesis. Which of these data tables best reflects the expected results of this experiment?

More Related