1 / 23

Scientific Illustrations

Drawings, Tables, and Graphs. 3. Scientific Illustrations. Photographs and drawings model and illustrate ideas and sometimes make new information clearer than written text can.

wendy-velez
Download Presentation

Scientific Illustrations

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. Drawings, Tables, and Graphs 3 Scientific Illustrations • Photographs and drawings model and illustrate ideas and sometimes make new information clearer than written text can. • For example, a drawing of an airplane engine shows how all the parts fit together much better than several pages of text (writing) could describe it.

  2. Drawings, Tables, and Graphs 3 Drawings • A drawing is sometimes the best choice to show details. • A drawing can emphasize only the things that are necessary to show. • A drawing also can show things you can’t see. • For example, you could draw the outline of two continents to show how they might have fit together at one time.

  3. Drawings, Tables, and Graphs 3 Drawings • Drawings can show hidden things, as well. For example, a drawing can show the details of the water cycle.

  4. Drawings, Tables, and Graphs 3 Drawings

  5. Drawings, Tables, and Graphs 3 Photographs • A still photograph shows an object exactly as it is at a single moment in time. • Movies show how an object moves and can be slowed down or sped up to show interesting features.

  6. Drawings, Tables, and Graphs 3 Tables and Graphs • A table displays information in rows and columns so that it is easier to read and understand.

  7. Drawings, Tables, and Graphs 3 Tables and Graphs • A graph is used to collect, organize, and summarize data in a visual way. • Three common types of graphs are line, bar, and circle graphs. • A line graphshows the relationship between two variables. • A variable is something that can change, or vary, such as the temperature of a liquid or the number of people in a race. • Both variables in a line graph must be numbers.

  8. Drawings, Tables, and Graphs 3 Tables and Graphs • One variable is shown on the horizontal axis, or x-axis, of the graph. • The other variable is placed along the vertical axis, or y-axis. • A line on the graph shows the relationship between the two variables.

  9. Drawings, Tables, and Graphs 3 Bar Graph • A bar graphuses rectangular blocks, or bars, of varying sizes to show the relationships among variables.

  10. Drawings, Tables, and Graphs 3 Bar Graph • One variable is divided into parts. • The second variable must be a number. • The bars show the size of the second variable.

  11. Drawings, Tables, and Graphs 3 Circle Graph • A circle graphshows the parts of a whole. • Circle graphs are sometimes called pie graphs. • Each piece of pie visually represents a fraction of the total.

  12. Drawings, Tables, and Graphs 3 Circle Graph • A circle has a total of 360°. To make a circle graph, you need to determine what fraction of 360 each part should be. • To do this you divide by the total to get a decimal which you convert to a percent • Example: 63 mammals = 0.1716= 17% • 367 endangered species

  13. Drawings, Tables, and Graphs 3 Circle Graph • To find degrees, first, determine the total of the parts. • The total of the parts, or endangered species, is 367. • One fraction of the total, Mammals, is 63 of 367 species. • Set up a ratio and cross multiply to solve for x: 63 x 360 /367 = 61.8

  14. Drawings, Tables, and Graphs 3 Reading Graphs • When you are using or making graphs to display data, be careful—the scale of a graph can be misleading. • A broken scale can be used to highlight small but significant changes, just as an inset on a map draws attention to a small area of a larger map. • Always analyze the measurements and graphs that you come across. If there is a surprising result, look closer at the scale.

  15. Drawings, Tables, and Graphs 3 Reading Graphs • This graph does not start at zero, which makes it appear that the number of species has more that quadrupled from 1996-2002.

  16. Drawings, Tables, and Graphs 3 Reading Graphs • The actual increase is about 20 percent, as you can see from this full graph. The broken scale must be noted in order to interpret the results correctly.

  17. Section Check 3 Question 1 Suppose you have two variables, for example, how much salt you eat in a day and how much water you drink, and you want to visually depict their relationship across time. What visual tool might you use to show this relationship?

  18. Section Check A line graph shows the relationship between two variables. Line graphs are excellent ways to quickly see the relationship between a variable plotted on the X axis and one plotted on the Y axis. 3 Answer

  19. Section Check 3 Question 2 When you put numerical data into rows and columns, you are creating a _______. A. calculation B. graph C. table D. waveform

  20. Section Check 3 Answer The answer is C. Rows and columns of numbers make up a table.

  21. Section Check 3 Question 3 Suppose you want to visually demonstrate how much of a given area is woodland, how much is grassy but has no trees, and how much has been developed. With different segments like this to consider, how might you choose to show the relationship of parts to the whole?

  22. Section Check 3 Answer Use a circle chart. A circle chart, or “pie chart,” is ideal for visually demonstrating how the different segments go together to form the whole.

  23. Homework

More Related