Post on 03-Jan-2016
Monday, October 29th
AGENDA:1 – Bell Ringer2 – Scientific Method3 – Exit TicketAnnouncementsLast day for lateassignments is
Friday
Today’s Goal:Students will be able to explain the steps of the scientific methodHomework1. Classroom Materials (see p. 3)2. Scientific Method (see p. 6)
Monday, October 29th
Objective: Students will be able to explain the steps of the scientific method
Bell Ringer (p. 15):1. Describe one time you
discovered something by accident.
2. Describe one time you discovered something on purpose.
3. What did you do differently in each case?
4. How are you going to do better in this class this week?
Monday, October 29th
Objective: Students will be able to explain the steps of the scientific method
Bell Ringer (p. 15):1. Describe one time you
discovered something by accident.
2. Describe one time you discovered something on purpose.
3. What did you do differently in each case?
4. How are you going to do better in this class this week?
Monday, October 29th
Objective: Students will be able to explain the steps of the scientific method
Bell Ringer (p. 15):1. Describe one time you
discovered something by accident.
2. Describe one time you discovered something on purpose.
3. What did you do differently in each case?
4. How are you going to do better in this class this week?
Monday, October 29th
Objective: Students will be able to explain the steps of the scientific method
Bell Ringer (p. 15):1. Describe one time you
discovered something by accident.
2. Describe one time you discovered something on purpose.
3. What did you do differently in each case?
4. How are you going to do better in this class this week?
Monday, October 29th
Objective: Students will be able to explain the steps of the scientific method
Bell Ringer (p. 15):1. Describe one time you
discovered something by accident.
2. Describe one time you discovered something on purpose.
3. What did you do differently in each case?
4. How are you going to do better in this class this week?
Monday, October 29th
Objective: Students will be able to explain the steps of the scientific method
Bell Ringer (p. 15):1. Describe one time you
discovered something by accident.
2. Describe one time you discovered something on purpose.
3. What did you do differently in each case?
4. How are you going to do better in this class this week?
Monday, October 29th
Objective: Students will be able to explain the steps of the scientific method
Bell Ringer (p. 15):1. Describe one time you
discovered something by accident.
2. Describe one time you discovered something on purpose.
3. What did you do differently in each case?
4. How are you going to do better in this class this week?
Monday, October 29th
AGENDA:1 – Bell Ringer2 – Scientific Method3 – Exit TicketAnnouncementsLast day for lateassignments is
Friday
Today’s Goal:Students will be able to explain the steps of the scientific methodHomework1. Classroom Materials (see p. 3)2. Scientific Method (see p. 6)
Homework
1. Classroom Materials – Bring classroom materials from page 3 by Thursday at the latest.I will not provide calculators or writing utensils for the rest of the year.
2. Scientific Method HW – Page 6
Week 8
Weekly Agenda
Monday 10/29 – Scientific Method
Tuesday 10/39 – Types of Variables
Wednesday 10/31 – Precision & Accuracy, Chemical & Physical Changes
Thursday 11/1 – ReviewFriday 11/2 – Review
CHAMPS for October 29th
C – Conversation – No talking unless directed
H – Help – RAISE HAND for questionsA – Activity – Take notes so you can
study later.M – Materials and Movement –
Pen/Pencil, PaperP – Participation – Take notes, answer
questionsS – Success – Understand the Scientific
Method
Video
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IqArHwtvE9Y
Cornell Notes: Please take out your notebook and properly set up your
paper.Topic: Scientific
MethodDate: 10/29/2012
Scientific Method
Definition: series of steps that allow scientists to investigate a natural occurrence
What is a natural occurrence?
Steps of the Scientific Method1. State the Problem/Ask a Question2. Gather Information3. Form a Hypothesis4. Perform an Experiment5. Analyze Data6. Draw a Conclusion
Notes
1. State the Problem/Ask a Question
Have to have something to answer MUST be testable/measurable
Ex: Think up a question with the person sitting next to you.
Notes
2. Gather Information Ask other scientists what they already
know Look up published research
Ex: How might you research your question?
Notes
3. Form a Hypothesis Educated guess that answers the
problem/question Usually in an “If…then” format
Ex: What is your hypothesis?
Brainstorm
4. Perform Experiment Carry out procedure Need materials list Actually attempt to answer the
problem/question Outcome must be
quantifiable/measurable
Ex: Describe an experiment to test your hypothesis?
Notes
5. Analyze Data Once you gather numbers and results
from the experiment, organize into tables and graphs
Use these tables and graphs to see if your hypothesis was correct
Ex: What sort of data would you get for your experiment?
Brainstorm
6. Draw a Conclusion Look at data See if you REJECT or SUPPORT your
hypothesis Make recommendations for more
studies
Ex: What sort of conclusions could you draw?
Practice (p. 4 in packet)
1. Write the six steps of the scientific method in order below. Beside of each step explain what scientists do
during this step.
Practice (p. 4 in packet)
1. Write the six steps of the scientific method in order below. Beside of each step explain what scientists
do during this step.
1. State the Problem/Ask a Question2. Gather Information3. Form a Hypothesis
4. Perform an Experiment5. Analyze Data
6. Draw a Conclusion
Practice (p. 4 in packet)
Read the following experiment and data. Use this information to answer question 2.Mr. Rana wants to make sure that every Harlan student has a balanced breakfast. He wonders if breakfast makes a difference in how focused students are during their morning classes: 1. First, he starts asking other teachers if they notice if students do better in class when they eat breakfast. The other teachers do not know, so he decides to test it! 2. Mr. Rana thinks that if students eat breakfast, they will perform better on their weekly chemistry quiz. He uses two groups of students to study—Group A eats breakfast and Group B does not eat breakfast. 4. For the next month, Mr. Rana gathers the students’ chemistry quiz grades. The data is below:
Practice (p. 4 in packet)
Week 1 Week 2 Week 3 Week 40
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
Chemistry Quiz Averages
Group A (Breakfast)Group B (No Breakfast)
Quiz
Avera
ge (
out
of
100)
Practice (p. 4 in packet)
2. Using the experiment explained above, write what Mr. Rana does for each step:
State the Problem: Mr. Rana wants to know if eating breakfast makes students get higher quiz grades.
Gather Information:
Form Hypothesis:
Perform Experiment:
Analyze Data:
Draw Conclusion:
Practice (p. 4 in packet)
2. Using the experiment explained above, write what Mr. Rana does for each step:
State the Problem: Mr. Rana wants to know if eating breakfast makes students get higher quiz grades.
Gather Information: Asked other teachers.
Form Hypothesis:
Perform Experiment:
Analyze Data:
Draw Conclusion:
Practice (p. 4 in packet)
2. Using the experiment explained above, write what Mr. Rana does for each step:
State the Problem: Mr. Rana wants to know if eating breakfast makes students get higher quiz grades.
Gather Information: Asked other teachers.
Form Hypothesis: Eating breakfast results in higher test scores.
Perform Experiment:
Analyze Data:
Draw Conclusion:
Practice (p. 4 in packet)
2. Using the experiment explained above, write what Mr. Rana does for each step:
State the Problem: Mr. Rana wants to know if eating breakfast makes students get higher quiz grades.
Gather Information: Asked other teachers.
Form Hypothesis: Eating breakfast results in higher test scores.
Perform Experiment: Tracking quiz scores over a month,
Analyze Data:
Draw Conclusion:
Practice (p. 4 in packet)
2. Using the experiment explained above, write what Mr. Rana does for each step:
State the Problem: Mr. Rana wants to know if eating breakfast makes students get higher quiz grades.
Gather Information: Asked other teachers.
Form Hypothesis: Eating breakfast results in higher test scores.
Perform Experiment: Tracking quiz scores over a month,
Analyze Data: Created a data table and a graph.
Draw Conclusion: Eating breakfast does result in higher test scores.
Practice (p. 4 in packet)
3. Identify the following as one of the steps from the scientific method (write E for experiment, P for problem, H for hypothesis, C for conclusion, D for analyze data, and GI for gather information)
_____ Portoria Birks buys four different foods for her puppy and tries each one for a month._____ Yolanda Mosley decided that Chow© dog food was making her dog fat._____ Emmanuel Hunt is concerned that his dog’s food is making him fat._____ Tahmera Kelley measures the dog’s weight every day and graphs her results._____ Harvella Lee thinks she might sing better after she drinks Coke. _____ Jordan Bennet plays basketball in his old Nikes and compares his performance to his ability to shoot baskets in his new Jordans. ______ Jamir Elliston uses three different fertilizers in his garden. He is going to measure how high his sunflowers grow in each type. ______ Diamond Whitelow is excited to get a new cell phone, but she can’t decide between a Motorola, a Droid, and an IPhone. Before deciding which one, she looks to see if there is any information about which one is best, and she asks her friends if they think one works better.
Exit Ticket (p. 16)
Identify the following as one of the steps from the scientific method (write E for experiment, P for problem, H for hypothesis, C for conclusion, D for analyze data, and GI for gather information)
_____ Ms. Parkhouse put a set of tiles in a dark cabinet and another set in the sunlight.
_____ Mr. Friedman took measurements of the mold for a month and tried to make sense of the numbers.
_____ Ms. Meagan wondered why mold always grew in only one corner of her classroom. She decided to investigate this.
_____ Mr. Spring’s students looked at the data and decided the mold was growing in dark places. They decided to make a graph of the data.
_____ Ms. McCleary suggested that the lack of light in the corner might be causing the mold to grow.