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Lab Report Guidelines. Physical Science Ms. McClammey. What lab reports and scientific papers do:. Persuade others to accept or reject hypotheses by presenting data and interpretations Detail data, procedures, and outcomes for future researchers
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Lab Report Guidelines Physical Science Ms. McClammey
What lab reports and scientific papers do: • Persuade othersto accept or reject hypotheses by presenting data and interpretations • Detail data, procedures, and outcomesfor future researchers • Become part of the accepted body of scientific knowledgewhen published unless later disproved • Provide an archival recordfor reference and document a current situation for future comparison
Your lab report must have a title: • The title should reflect the factual content with less than ten words in a straightforward manner
Problem Statement • What were you trying to find out in this lab? • Part 1: How do we observe the relationship between potential and kinetic energy? • Part 2:
Variables • Part 1: • Independent Variable = starting height • Dependent Variable = bounce height • Part 2: • Independent Variable = speed • Dependent Variable = rebound distance
Hypothesis • Phrase what you thought was happening before the lab in and if/then…. statement) • Be sure to mention potential and kinetic energy in your hypothesis. • Example: • If you run in the hallway, then you will most likely trip and fall down on the floor. • If I drop the ball from 25 centimeters in the hallway, then it will not have very much potential energy, so it will be able to bounce 47 cm.
Materials and Procedure • These should be copied directly from your lab! • Materials: Meter tape, Masking tape, Pen/Pencil, Tennis Ball, Golf Ball • Procedure: • 1. Starting at the floor, stretch a piece of masking tape vertically against the wall. • 2. Draw lines across the tape at 50cm, 75cm, and 100 cm (1 meter) above the floor. • 3. Hold the tennis ball at the 50cm meter mark and drop it. Observe carefully as • the ball bounces. • 4. Mark the height of the bounce on the tape. • Etc.
DATA • Organize data into tables, figures, graphs, photographs, etc. Data in a table should not be duplicated in a graph or figure • Title all figures and tables; include a legend explaining symbols, abbreviations, or special methods • All data tables should have a heading or title and should include all columns and rows labeled with the correct unit of measurement.
Analysis • (GRAPH + 2-3 sentences) • Attach a computer generated graph for Part 1 and 2. If the graph is completed by hand, it must be done in pen, color pencil/marker, using graph paper or copy paper. • Remember to include labels (including units) and a title. Write 2-3 sentences about what each graph is showing. • DO NOT INTERPRET THE DATA HERE…..JUST STATE THE FACTS.
Conclusion4 paragraphs\5 sentences minimum per paragraph • Strive for logic and precision and avoid ambiguity, especially with pronouns and sequences • Keep your writing impersonal; avoid the use of the first person (i.e. I or we) • Use the past tense and be consistent within the reportnote: "data" is plural and "datum" is singular; species is singular and plural • Italicize all scientific names (genus and species) • Use the metric system of measurement and abbreviate measurements without periods (i.e. cm kg) spell out all numbers beginning sentences or less than 10 (i.e. "two explanations of six factors"). • Write numbers as numerals when greater than ten (i.e. 156) or associated with measurements (i.e. 6 mm or 2 g) • Have a neutral person review and critique your report before submission