Objective 4 Paper Aeroplane Lab
Objective 4 Paper Aeroplane Lab
RESEARCH
Maybe now do a little research in books or in the internet or by asking people or by trialing some
plane designs. Record some notes of your research, including the links or sources.
HYPOTHESIS
Make one specific hypothesis that attempts to answer the question, and justify the hypothesis.
You will write a statement something like this:
"I think that 'x' design will allow the paper aeroplane to fly the furthest because ............ ."
Take note here of such an important concept: it does not matter in any way whether you
later support or reject the hypothesis. In fact, finding out something which you did not
expect to happen, is often how we learn in science!!
RESULTS
Draw a simple table and complete the table with the results of your investigation.
ANALYSIS OF RESULTS
Here you will probably want to draw a graph - most likely in this case, a bar graph. Graphs allow
you to visualise your results so that it is easier to make a conclusion. Look at the graph and
search for patterns or trends.
CONCLUSION
Your initial conclusion is a very straightforward statement:
"The results of this investigation SUPPORT (or REJECT) the hypothesis."
Then you should justify why you have arrived at that conclusion with a "because" statement
which explains why you have arrived at that conclusion.
EVALUATION
Here are some possible questions for discussion:
If you did this experiment again, would you get the same results? Why or why not?
Will someone else who follows your procedure get the same data? Why or why not?
What other factors affect the flight of a paper airplane?
How else could you have designed the experiment to test this hypothesis?
What might you have done differently in order to improve the results?
What follow-up questions (for investigation) can you suggest?