120 likes | 473 Views
Observations vs. Inferences. Observations. Describing facts and occurrences Info collected with 5 senses Example : You OBSERVE that Ms. McKinley has brown eyes. Inferences. A possible explanation/guess/conclusion about an observation
E N D
Observations • Describing facts and occurrences • Info collected with 5 senses • Example: You OBSERVE that Ms. McKinley has brown eyes.
Inferences • A possible explanation/guess/conclusion about an observation • Example: You leave the movie theater and OBSERVEthat the ground is wet, so you INFER that it rained.
Tracks like these are common in parts of New England and in the southwestern United States. What do you OBSERVE? What can you INFER?
Observation (O) or Inference (I)? • _____ 1. A man screamed, grabbed his chest, and fell to the floor. • _____ 2. The pigeon was probably pecking at bread crumbs because it was hungry. • _____ 3. The girl looked both ways before crossing the street. • _____ 4. A man was talking loudly to himself in the mall, so he was probably crazy.
Answers • O • I • O • I
Observation (O) or Inference (I)? • _____ 5. He honked his horn a lot in rush hour traffic. • _____ 6. During the lecture Mariana stared at the ceiling, took no notes, and looked at the clock twelve times. • _____ 7. Alex must have been sad because he was crying about his broken fire truck toy. • _____ 8. Ken was probably angry because she saw Barbie with another man. • _____9. Even though Adriana didnt say anything, I could tell by her laughing that she was having a good time.
Answers • O • O • I • I • I
Exit Slip • Identify each statement as an observation (O), inference (I), or prediction (P) • Write your name on the back of your slip!!! • I think it is going to be sunny today. • It is sunny today. • It will probably be warm today because it is sunny.