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The
Scientific Method
is an organized way of figuring something out.
There are usually six parts to it.
1.
Purpose- What do you want to learn? An
example would be, "Do plants grow better under different colored
lights?" or "Do girls have faster reflexes than boys?"
2. Research- Find out as much as you can.
Look for information in books, on the internet, and by talking with
teachers to get the most information you can before you start experimenting.
3. Hypothesis- After doing your research,
try to predict the answer to the problem. Another term for hypothesis
is 'educated guess'. This is usually stated like " If I...(do something)
then...(this will occur)"
An example would be, "If I grow plants under green lightbulbs,
then they will grow better than plants growing under red lightbulbs"
4. Experiment- The fun part! Design a test
or procedure to confirm or disprove your hypothesis. In our example,
you would set up a plant under a green lightbulb and a plant under a
red light and observe then for a couple of weeks. Also set up a plant
under regular white light to compare the others to. If you are doing
this for a science fair, you will probably have to write down exactly
what you did for your experiment step by step.
5. Analysis- Record what happened during
the experiment. Also known as 'data'.
6. Conclusion- Review the data and check
to see if your hypothesis was correct. If the plant under the green
lightbulb grew better, you proved your hypothesis, if not, your hypothesis
was wrong. It is not "bad" if your hypothesis was wrong, because
you still learned something!
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