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Scientific Method and Experimental Design

The document discusses key aspects of scientific experiments such as the scientific method, hypotheses, variables, sample size, and validity. It explains that the scientific method involves making observations, asking questions, forming hypotheses, testing hypotheses through controlled experiments, analyzing results, drawing conclusions, and communicating findings. It also defines key terms like hypotheses, independent and dependent variables, and how sample size and experimental controls relate to validity.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
24 views9 pages

Scientific Method and Experimental Design

The document discusses key aspects of scientific experiments such as the scientific method, hypotheses, variables, sample size, and validity. It explains that the scientific method involves making observations, asking questions, forming hypotheses, testing hypotheses through controlled experiments, analyzing results, drawing conclusions, and communicating findings. It also defines key terms like hypotheses, independent and dependent variables, and how sample size and experimental controls relate to validity.

Uploaded by

ab13love
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Scientific Method and Experimental Design

Hypothesis Controlled Experiment and Variable Independent and Dependent Variable Sample Size and Validity

Steps of the Scientific Method


1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Make observations. Ask a question. Form a hypothesis. Test the hypothesis. Analyze the results. Draw conclusions. Communicate the results.

Hypothesis
An explanation of a natural event or observation that can be tested by additional observations or experimentation

Example of Hypothesis

Observation: The population of tiger salamanders declined 65% between 1984 and 1988

Hypothesis: Acids that were formed in the upper atmosphere by pollutants were falling onto mountains in the winter snows

Controlled Experiment and Variable


Tests one variable at a time (experimental variable) Controlled experiments include 2 groups: Experimental Group Exposed to experimental variable Control Group Not exposed to experimental variable

Independent and Dependent Variables


Independent variable: The factor that is deliberately manipulated in an experiment (also called experimental variable) Dependent variable: The variable that is changed or determined by manipulation of the independent variable. It is what is measure in the experiment

Sample Size Sample Size (N) The number of subjects involved in experimentation

Increasing N
Decreases impact of chance events and error

Increase reliability of results

Why does a good experiment need to have two parts, including a control?
It isolates and tests the effects of one variable at a time Provides certainty that the change is due to the effect of the variable being tested

Validity

The extent to which experimental results can be generalized to other settings or situations

To increase validity, increase N

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