Observe
* Research * Hypothesize *
Test * Conclude
The scientific method is
a process for forming and testing solutions to problems, or
theorizing about how or why things work. It tries to
reduce the influence of "faith" or bias or prejudice
of the experimenter so that the process is valid anywhere in
our world.
You can also use the
scientific method to solve everyday problems! If the
lights are out in your residence, you can guess many reasons
why: you didn't pay your electric bill, there was storm
that knocked out power, the toaster and microwave overloaded a
circuit, etc.
-
Look for the
options or possibilities (research),
-
select the best
explanation (form a
hypothesis),
-
test
it, and
-
form a conclusion
or theory.
If you think toaster and
microwave were the answer, you can repeat this condition, and
predict the outcome (experiment
or test your theory).
If not paying your bill was the problem, you can repeat that
also, but it can be expensive and inconvenient!
The
Scientific Method
State the
problem and observe conditions
You observe or wonder
about something in your world, or in your class, and wonder
how, why, when, something occurs
-
Create a short,
meaningful title
of your project
-
Write out a
statement of purpose
that describes what you want to do
-
Make a careful,
step-by-step notation
of your observations. Be objective! and do not
guess why something is happening. That takes place
later
-
Gather
information of similar
research.
This is a literature review
-
Identify
significant conditions
or factors of the situation
-
Summarize the
problem
in a clear, simple statement. Emphasize the end
result or effect.
Form your
hypothesis
-
Research
options:
-
What are
possible causes for what you observed?
Could they reliably and consistently predict or
determine the same outcome?
-
What causes are
the least likely to affect the outcome?
-
What are the
best choices?
-
Choose the best
option or answer to your
problem as your hypothesis.
This will be an "educated guess" based upon both
your observation and past experiences.
-
State your
hypothesis in a simple,
clear statement
Hypothesis:
a possible explanation for a cause and effect of a given
situation or set of factors that can be tested, and can
be repetitively proved right (or wrong!)
(Remember: A hypothesis
is not an observation or description
of an event, that is in the first, observation stage!)
Test
Draw
conclusions
-
Summarize your
results and conclusions
use graphs and tables to illustrate these.
-
Refer back to
your observations, data,
and hypothesis for consistency
-
Note
difficulties and problems,
items for further research, or what you would do
differently if you could
If you did not prove
your hypothesis, you have
succeeded in another sense!
Unsuccessful experiments
-
provide information
that can lead to answers by eliminating options;
-
save someone the
trouble of repeating your experiments;
-
suggest other ways
of solving similar problems
Remember: research builds on the work of others.
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