1 / 14

Chapter 1

Chapter 1. The Nature of Science. Sec. 1: Methods of Science. Science —a method for studying the natural world. 3 Major categories of Science Life science—living things Earth science—Earth and space Physical science—matter and energy. The Scientific Method.

Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 1

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. Chapter 1 The Nature of Science

  2. Sec. 1: Methods of Science • Science—a method for studying the natural world. • 3 Major categories of Science • Life science—living things • Earth science—Earth and space • Physical science—matter and energy

  3. The Scientific Method • Scientific Method—an organized set of investigative procedures. • 6 steps of the scientific method • State the problem—observe an event in nature and ask “why?” • Gather information—learn about the background of the problem • Form a hypothesis—make a prediction that explains the observation

  4. More Scientific Method • 6 Steps of the scientific method continued • Test the hypothesis—conduct experiments to prove (or disprove) the hypothesis • Analyze data—record and organize observations • Draw conclusions—decide whether the hypothesis was supported (if not, go back)

  5. The Scientific Method

  6. Experimenting • Experiment—tests the effect of one thing on another using controlled conditions. • An experiment needs at least 2 variables. • Variable—a quantity that can have more than one value. • Independent variable—the variable you change in the experiment. • Dependent variable—changes because another variable changes.

  7. Example: identify the variables • You set up an experiment to determine which of 3 fertilizers helps plants grow the most. • In this experiment: • What is the independent variable? • type of fertilizer • What is the dependent variable? • amount of growth

  8. Experimenting (continued) • A good experiment should include constants and a control. • Constant—a factor that does not change when other variables change. • Control—the standard by which test results can be compared.

  9. Example: identify constants and control Fertilizer Experiment • You set up 4 trials using the same soil, water, sunlight, and type of plant. Three of the plants receive a different type of fertilizer. The 4th is not fertilized. • What are the constants? • Soil, water, sunlight, & type of plant • What is the control? • The 4th, unfertilized plant

  10. Scientific Theories and Laws • Theory—an explanation of things based on many observations and experiments • NOT A GUESS • A theory can be disproved by further experimentation. • Scientific law—a statement about what happens in nature that seems to be true all the time. • Example: gravity

  11. Limitations of Science • Science is a way of explaining the world. • Science cannot explain or solve everything. • Science cannot answer questions about emotions or values.

  12. Temperature Conversions Converting to: Converting from

More Related