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Scientific Processes & Terms
Unit 1: Scientific Processes
Physical Science
Steinbrink
What is Science?
Science is the knowledge obtained by
observing natural events and conditions
in order to discover facts and formulate
laws or principles that can be verified or
tested.
Branches of Science
Chemistry
Physics
Biology
Astronomy
Oceanography
Meteorology
Zoology
Geology
What is Pseudoscience?
Research that has the appearance of
science but does not follow the scientific
method, usually lacking peer review and
repetition of observations by
independent researchers.
Examples of Pseudoscience
Big Foot
Loch Ness Monster
UFO’s
Psychic Phenomena
Astrology
Inference
Interpreting an observation or statement
based on prior knowledge.
An inference is an act of reasoning, not
a fact.
Observation
The act of making and recording
information by using your senses.
– Sight
– Hearing
– Touch
– Smell
– Taste
Observation vs. Inference
Sample Observations
Sample Inferences
The footprints in the soil An animal made the
each have five toes.
footprints.
The larger footprints are
about 20 cm long.
A bear made the
footprint.
The space between each
pair of footprints is
about 30 cm.
The animal was walking
not running.
Hypothesis
An educated guess that helps to guide the
research or experiment study.
A hypothesis is a possible explanation for a
problem using what you know and what you
observe.
“A tentative answer to a well-framed question—an
explanation for a problem that leads to predictions
that can be studied by making observations or
performing experiments.”
Prediction
Tells what to do to test to see if your
hypothesis is correct.
Use If….then…
Quantitative Data
Deals with numbers.
Data which can be measured.
Length, height, area, volume, weight,
speed, time, temperature, humidity,
sound levels, cost, members, ages, etc.
Quantitative → Quantity
THINK NUMBERS
Qualitative Data
Deals with descriptions.
Data can be observed but not
measured.
Colors, textures, smells, tastes,
appearance, beauty, etc.
Qualitative → Quality
Variables
A factor that changes in an experiment
in order to test a hypothesis.
How many variables should you test
during an experiment?
Just one variable at a time!
Independent Variable
What you choose to measure in an
experiment.
Often times this will be time units.
Graphed on the x-axis
Dependent Variable
Value depends on what happens in the
experiment.
This is what you measure or count!
Result of the independent variable.
Graphed on the y-axis.
Scientific Law
A summary of many experimental results and
observations; a law tells how things work
Scientific Theory
An explanation for some phenomenon
that is based on observation,
experimentation, and reasoning.