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I-N-D-E-P-E-N-D-E-N-T variables, dependent variables, and constants. Catalyst: What is a hypertonic solution? Let’s say you put a cell in a hypotonic solution. What will happen to it?. Objectives. By the end of today, SWBAT…
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I-N-D-E-P-E-N-D-E-N-T variables, dependent variables, and constants • Catalyst: • What is a hypertonic solution? • Let’s say you put a cell in a hypotonic solution. What will happen to it?
Objectives • By the end of today, SWBAT… • Identify independent, dependent, and controlled variables in a scientific experiment • Create a model of osmosis with eggs
Experimentation • Key Point #1: A proper experiment always has an independent variable, dependent variable, and constants. • The purpose of an experiment is to test how changing ONE THING affects something else.
Variables • Independent Variable: The thing that I change • Dependent variable: The thing that is measured • Remember • Variables are always nouns!!! • Variables NEVER have numbers in them!!!
Good experiments… • ONLY CHANGE ONE THING!!! • Constant: things that we keep the same in the experiment • You must keep everything but the IV constant, or your data may not be valid!
Example • Let’s say we want to design an experiment to determine what causes GSP to win fights.
Determining variables from hypotheses • “If Jay-Z stops cussing, he will sell fewer CDs because students like cussing.” • What is the IV? • “What am I changing?” • What is the DV? • “What am I measuring?” • What are the constants? • “What stays the same?”
“If Jay-Z stops cussing, he will sell fewer CDs because students like cussing.” • The IV is NOT “if Jay-Z stops cussing” • The DV is NOT “he will sell fewer CDs” • Remember • Variables are always nouns!!! • Variables NEVER have numbers in them!!!
Practice • You want to know if older microwaves heat food more slowly than new ones. So, you get a bunch of microwaves, write down their ages, and time how long it takes them to boil water. IV = DV = Microwave Age time to boil water
Practice You want to know which season has the most love bugs. Every night, you record how many love bugs you find outside. IV = DV = Season/month Amount of love bugs
Practice • Students of different ages were given the same puzzle to assemble. The puzzle assembly time was measured. IV = DV = Age Puzzle Assembly Time
If there are more students, then there will be more school buses. IV = DV = Amount of students Number of school buses
If the cost of beignets increases, then fewer will be sold. What depends on what? IV = DV = Cost of Beignets Amount of Beignets sold
If the Saints sign more free agents, then they will win more games. IV = Number of free agents DV = number of games won
Conclusion • A proper experiment always has an independent variable, dependent variable, and constants. • Independent Variable: The thing that I change • Dependent variable: The thing that is measured • Constant: things that we keep the same in the experiment
Egg Lab! • An egg is ONE cell! • Underneath the shell is a semi-permeable membrane… a cell membrane! • If we put this egg into a hypertonic/hypotonic solution, osmosis will occur.
Question • Will an unshelled egg increase or decrease in size after being placed overnight in a hypertonic (corn syrup) or hypotonic (water) solution?
Egg lab! • Read the procedures for the egg lab • Fill out the hypothesis, IV, DV, and constants at the top of your egg lab worksheet • Remember… • Good hypotheses are testable and educated • IV is what I change • DV is what I measure (it depends on the IV) • Constants do not change • Once you have done all of this, check in with me. • If you did a good job, I will let you begin the lab.
Exit Question • Let’s say you want to figure out if drinking milk actually makes you taller. So you drink a glass of milk every day, and record your height every day. • What is the independent variable? • What is the dependent variable? • What is at least one constant?
After you get your computer running… • Go to this website: • http://school.discoveryeducation.com/sciencefaircentral/ • On the brown tabs on the lower left, click virtual lab. Then, hit get started. • Click How Does Your Garden Grow Virtual Lab (Flash)