what is science?

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What is Science? Chapter 1, Lesson 1

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What is Science?. Chapter 1, Lesson 1. Using one or more of your senses and tools to gather information . observing. Creating represent ations of complex objects or processes . (ex. mathematical equations). making models. Deals with numbers , or amounts . qua n titative observation. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: What is Science?

What is Science?

Chapter 1, Lesson 1

Page 2: What is Science?

Using one or more of your senses and tools to gather information.

observing

Page 3: What is Science?

Creating representations of complex objects or processes.(ex. mathematical equations)

making models

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Deals with numbers, or amounts.

quantitative observation

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Way of learning about the natural world.

science

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Deals with descriptions that cannot be expressed in numbers.

qualitative observation

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When you explain or interpret the things you observe.

inferring

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The grouping together of items that are alike in some way.

classifying

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Making a statement or a claim about what will happen in the future based on past experience or evidence.

predicting

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Comparing observations and data to reach a conclusion about them.

evaluating

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Bias that stems from a person’s likes and dislikes.

personal bias

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The act of making decisions and drawing conclusions based on available evidence.

Objective

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Having an attitude of doubt.

skepticism

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Using specific observations to make generalizations.

inductive reasoning

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The act of making decisions and drawing conclusions where personal feelings have been entered.

subjective

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Rules that enable people to know right from wrong.

ethics

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Type of reasoning that can lead to faulty conclusions.

faulty reasoning

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A way to explain things by starting with a general idea and then applying the idea to a specific observation.

deductive reasoning

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Bias that stems from the culture in which a person grows up.

cultural bias

Page 20: What is Science?

Scientific attitude used by good scientists when reporting their observations and results.

honesty

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A mistake in the design of an experiment that makes a particular result more likely.

experimental bias

Page 22: What is Science?

Scientific attitude that makes a scientist capable of accepting new and different ideas.

open-mindedness

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Scientific attitude that should be balanced by a scientist’s open-mindedness.

skepticism

Page 24: What is Science?

Scientific attitude that helps scientists come up with inventive ways to solve problems.

creativity

Page 25: What is Science?

Diverse ways in which scientists study the natural world and propose explanations based on the evidence they gather.

scientific inquiry

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Possible answer to a scientific question (not a fact).

hypothesis

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What is needed before a hypothesis can be accepted as true.

many trials

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Factor that can change in an experiment.

variable

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Factor that is purposely changed to test a hypothesis.

manipulated variable

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Factor that may change in response to a manipulated variable.

responding variable

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Experiment in which only one variable is manipulated at a time.

controlled experiment

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Facts, figures and other evidence gathered through observation.

data

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Well-tested explanation for a wide range of observations.

scientific theory

Page 34: What is Science?

Statement that describes what scientists expect to happen every time under a particular set of conditions.Example – “All objects in the universe attract each other”

scientific law

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A summary of what is learned from an experiment.

conclusion

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Tool that can help you interpret data.

graph

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3 ways scientists communicate their results.

• publish articles• talking at meetings• internet