Scientific Method Reading
Scientific Method Reading
You may not realize it, but you are a scientist. Even though you do not have college
or university training, you practice scientific skills everyday of your life. Every time you
wonder how to fix or repair something, you are being a scientist.
Observations are a large part of science, but there is more to science than
observation. The word science is from the Latin word scire, which means to know.
Scientists attempt to know things. They want answers to questions.
After facts are studied, observations taken, and experiments done, a theory is
developed. A theory is the most logical explanation of events that occur in nature. A
theory must be tested over and over again. When a theory has been tested many times
and is accepted as true, it is called a law. Sometimes theories and laws have to be
changed based on new evidence from observation and experimentation. But this is the
heart of science: Allow questions to be asked and new scientific explanations to be
developed.
When scientists try to solve a problem they do it in an orderly and systematic way.
The method the use is called the scientific method. The steps are described in the
paragraphs below.
Suppose you tried to start your car on a cold morning. The car will not start and you
notice ice frozen on the pavement underneath the car. You realize that you forgot to put
anti-freeze in the car.
Step one: Stating a problem or question clearly.
Why does anti-freeze mixed with water in the engines cooling system keep the water
from freezing and cracking the block of the car? This is the type of question that a
scientist would ask.
Step two: Research your problem. Use the library, the Internet, and
interview people. You may have an answer without testing.
Step three: Form a hypothesis.
Once the problem has been stated and researched, a hypothesis is formed. A
hypothesis is a possible solution. A scientist might state the hypothesis like a
question: Does anti-freeze in a car lower the freezing temperature of the water in the car
so that the water wont freeze? A hypothesis should be testable, based upon research,
and give guidelines for the experiment.
Step four: Design and perform experiments.
Next, a scientist will test the hypothesis by performing one or more experiments. In the
experiment, a scientist attempts to test only one variable at a time. (A variable is that
part of the experiment which is changed or manipulated. It is compared to a control
which is the part of the experiment that is not changed) This is done so that any results
can be attributed to the one and only variable. The experiment consists of a complete
materials list and a set of detailed, step by step procedures which allow scientists to
carry out the experiment.
Step five: Recording and analyzing data.
In any experiment, the scientist observes and records data. Charts and graphs might be
used. Computers are helpful when there is a large amount of data to be recorded. The
scientist would then study the data in order to make a conclusion.
Step Six: Stating a conclusion.
A scientist will run an experiment over and over again. When the data seem to be
accurate and consistent, a conclusion can be reached. A conclusion states whether or
not the hypothesis was correct. A conclusion also includes an analysis of errors which
occurred during the experiment. After a conclusion has been reached, there are usually
other questions that arise. And the scientific method is used again to answer these new
questions.
Questions over reading:
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What is the name of the process that scientists use to solve problems?
3.
What is a hypothesis?
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