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Explore the nature of science through an experiment on popcorn prices. Learn about experimental setup, data organization, and critical thinking in this engaging activity. Access the online textbook for key science terms and concepts. Discover the importance of observation, problem-solving, and data reporting skills. Apply units of measurement and scientific methods to investigate and analyze data. Practice creating graphs to present scientific findings effectively. Enhance your knowledge of scientific principles while having fun with popcorn economics!
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BELLWORK : 8/16-17/12 Think of a question that you could answer through an experiment: What is the question? How would you setup the experiment?
Introduction to Science 1 – The Nature of Science 2 – The Way Science Works 3 – Organizing Data
Online Textbook Access • Go to URL • http://my.hrw.com • Username • rcsps • Password • rutherford
Key Terms • Science – Knowledge obtained by observing natural events and conditions to learn facts, principles, laws • Technology – Application of science for practical purposes • Law – A descriptive statement or equation that predicts events under certain conditions • Theory – System of ideas explaining related observations and supported by evidence
How Science Takes Place • A scientist may perform experiments to find a new aspect of the natural world, to explain a known phenomenon, to check the results of other experiments, or to test predictions of current theories • Examples – New materials for computer chips that make processing speeds/phones more advanced
How Science Takes Place • Examples – TVs were built after the early cathode ray tubes were developed in the late 19th century
Scientists Experiment • Answer questions by investigating • Sometimes these are old questions, sometimes new • Often, questions arise from observations • Investigate by designing/conducting experiments • Experimental results are confirmed ( repetition )
Branches of Science • Natural Science: Biological, Physical, Earth
Working Together • Different branches of science work together, along with technology • Example: Applying newer computer-chip materials into actual designs ( Razr, self-cooled labtops )
Laws & Theories – Always Tested • Laws allow predictions to be made about how a system will behave under given conditions • GRAVITY • Theories explain HOW a process takes place • PLATE TECTONICS
Models • Mathematics is useful to describe events • Gravity has an equation
Models • Models can represent physical events • Used in daily life • Hurricane trajectories • Weather predictions
BELLWORK : 8/20/12 Which popcorn is the better deal?
Last Week • Discussed the fundamental nature of science • Also worked on observation skills • Anyone observe something interesting over the weekend?
Introduction to Science 1 – The Nature of Science 2 – The Way Science Works 3 – Organizing Data
Science Skills • Identifying problems • Planning experiments • Recording observations • Correctly reporting data
Critical Thinking • Involves asking questions, making observations, and using logic • Surprise!!
BELLWORK : 8/20/12 Which popcorn is the better deal? Discuss
Units of Measurement • In your notes, list 5 you can think of. • Do these relate to length, mass, weight, time, volume
Units of Measurement • Scientists use standard units of measure – SI System • Meters, grams, Seconds
Units of Measurement • SI ( System Internationale ) used for consistency • Prefixes allow for easy converting • EXAMPLES: • m km • kg g • seconds milliseconds
Exit Pass – Unit Conversions • Study Guide – Pg 3 • Problem 3 • Remaining Time – Problems 1, 5 & 6
Bellwork – 08/21/12 • Study Guide – Pg 3 • Problem 3 • Finished? – Questions 1, 5 & 6
Help with # 1, pg 3 • Microscopes – magnify ( make larger ) small objects • Telescopes – magnify objects far away • Radio telescope – detect radio waves from objects • Spectroscopes – separate light into a rainbow • Ruler – finds length
Key Terms • Variable – A factor changing in an experiment • Length – Measure of the straight-line distance between two points • Volume – The space occupied by an object • Mass – Amount of matter in an object • Weight – Amount of gravitational force on object
Scientific Method – Use Colors!! • Notice there is more than time where you observe
Are They The Same? • Are they the same? - Hypothesis • How can we test your hypothesis?
Bellwork – 8/23/12 • Study Guide • Finish pg. 3 - #2 , #4
Introduction to Science 1 – The Nature of Science 2 – The Way Science Works 3 – Organizing Data
Presenting Scientific Data • Scientists use written reports and oral presentations • To share results • Organizing/Presenting this info is important
Line Graphs • Show continuous changes • Time : Independent Variable (x-axis) • Doesn’t DEPEND on anything • Gas Volume : Dependent Variable (y-axis) • Depends on something else
Demonstration • Gas-Producing Reaction • Lots of gas at first, then slows down • Adding Vinegar to Baking Soda makes CO2
Bar Graphs • Compares similar data for different items or events
Pie Chart Graphs • Shows parts of a whole ( or parts of 100% )
Lab Activity – Motion Graphing • If we do not take this seriously or respect the equipment, we will not use this setup again
Lab Activity – Motion Graphing • Each group goes to their station • One person logs into network/labtop • Open Logger Pro Software • Open file “01a Graph Matching”
Procedure • Collect data by hitting green “Collect” button • You will hear Motion Detector “clicking” • You will also see data collected an graph
Lab Activities • Turn the detector on and stand still in front of it • What do you see on a distance vs. time graph? • Repeat the test but slowly move away from the detector • What do you see?
Lab Activities • Turn the detector on and move back and forth in front of it ( get far away, move closer ) • What do you see on a distance vs. time graph?
GRADE - Graph • Setup a graph of distance vs time for a person • What would it look like if someone is moving away from these detectors at constant speed? • What type of graph is this ( line, bar, pie chart )?
Bellwork - 08/27/12 • What does it mean to be precise? • QUIZ – Thursday ( 6th ) and Friday
Precision & Accuracy • Precision: the exactness of a measurement • Accuracy: how close a measurement is to the true value
Applying Precision - Accuracy • Scientists use significant figures to show precision of a measured quantity • Significant figure: Prescribed decimal place determining the amount of rounding-off when assessing the precision of a measurement • Round your answers to the correct significant figures
LAB Activity - GRADE • Get 50 points for participation • If I see not participating in one way or the other – less than 50 points • Document on Projector Screen ( 1 / group )
Bellwork - 08/29/12 • Think of the paper-wad toss we did yesterday. Would it be accurate, precise, neither, both in the following situation? • 4 made it in the basket, 1 landed far away • QUIZ – Thursday ( 6th ) and Friday ( 3rd, 5th, 7th )
Significant Figures – Counting Rules • ALL non-zero digits are Significant • Leading and trailing zeros are not significant • 2500 and 0.000036 have TWO Significant Figures • Zeros in between Non-Zeros are significant • 2501 and 2003 have FOUR Significant Figures • Zeros after a decimal point ARE SIGNIFICANT • They do not begin the number • 25.00 and 15.10 have FOUR Significant Figures
Chpt 1 Quiz • Key Terms • Scientific method • Branches of science • Metric conversions • units (length - meters, mass - grams, time - sec) • Types of graphs • Precision and accuracy