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1. How did scientists study nature in the past? Bias:
To influence in a particular, typically unfair direction; prejudice.
Naturalist:someone with a passion for and knowledge of the natural world
2. How do we study science? Laboratory vs field work
3. What is science? Science: A process used to solve problems or develop an understanding of nature that involves testing possible answers.
4. What is the scientific method? Method of gaining information about the world by forming possible solutions to questions, followed by rigorous testing to determine if the proposed solutions are valid.
5. Presumptions of the Scientific Method Specific causes for observed events.
Causes can be identified.
General rules can describe observations.
Repeated events have same cause.
Perceptions are not individualistic.
Fundamental rules of nature are universal.
6. The Scientific Method Observation
Background – literature survey
Hypothesis
Methods and materials
Results
Statistics
graphs
Discussion
Conclusion
References
7. Observation Occurs when we use our senses, or extension thereof, to record an event.
Careful, thoughtful recognition of an event.
Often leads to additional questions about the observations.
Asking the right question is critical in determining how, and where, to look for answers.
Literature Exploration
8. Hypothesis - A testable statement that provides a possible answer to a question, or an explanation for an observation.
A good hypothesis must be logical, account for all relevant information, allow prediction of related future events, and be testable.
Given a choice, the simplest hypothesis with the fewest assumptions is the most desirable.
9. Experiment Re-creation of an event enabling an investigator to support or disprove a hypothesis.
Controlled: Separate variables and divide experiment into experimental and control groups, differing by only one variable.
Reproducible: Experiment is repeated to eliminate unconscious bias.
Independent investigators must be able to reproduce the experiment.
10. Publishing Results must be published for peers to be able to examine and criticize.
A hypothesis supported by many experiments and by different investigators is considered reliable.
11. Control vs test variables Control:
Standard, no change, not manipulated
Used as a basis for comparison with test variable
Test variable:
Experimental
Manipulated
Usually changes during experiment
12. Inductive vs Deductive Inductive:
Intuition
insight
Used to form hypothesis
Deductive:
Deduce
Conclude
Interprete
Used to evaluate results
13. Laws vs theories vs models Law – hypothesis supported by many studies
Law of gravity
Law of Natural selection
Theory – supported by some evidence
Theory of Evolution
Still questions about exact processes
Model
Physical or written schematic demonstrating how a natural event is related to other events.
14. How does the scientific method relate to lab reports? Introduction
Observation: What question are you investigating?
Background: Literature review – what have other scientists discovered on the same topic
Describe animal, plant or habitat you are investigating.
Species descriptions
Habitat description
Hypothesis: form a hypothesis using intuition from reading reports of other scientists and applying the information to your observation.
What do you think is the explanation for what you see?
15. How does the scientific method relate to lab reports? Methods and Materials
List materials used to run the experiment
Describe how you will conduct the experiment
Describe how you will evaluate the experiment
Graphs
statistics
Sometimes the site description goes here
16. How does the scientific method relate to lab reports? Results
Data table
Graphs
Statisitics
Paragraph describing results
17. How does the scientific method relate to lab reports? Discussion
How did your results support your hypothesis (or not). What evidence do you have of this?
Stats
graphs
How do your results related to what other scientists have found?
Do your results relate or contribute information to other theories, laws or models?
18. How does the scientific method relate to lab reports? Conclusion
What is your overall conclusion or summary of this experiment?
19. How does the scientific method relate to lab reports? References cited: cite your references – Journals
Beal, D.L. and R.V. Anderson, 1993. The response of zooplankton to applications of rotenone in a small pond. Bull. Environ. Contam. Toxicol. 51: 551-556.
Internet
Beal, D.L. 2000. Restoring River Otters to the Illinois River; K-6 internet activities.
http://www2.ic.edu/beal/otters.
Books Use the same format as journals
Author, date published, title, edition (if available), publisher, number of pages.
20. Scientific Method online Refs http://www2.ic.edu/beal/sciencemethods.html