SELF
QUIZ: SCIENCE
Answers (questions)
Sources: PowerPoint 01c
1. A way of knowing about the natural world using a process designed to reduce
the chance of being misled.
2. Process:
- Observation
- Go see your friend's fish pond to confirm the absence of fish, etc.
- Question
- Ask, "Why have my neighbor's fish died in the pond?"
- Literature Review
- Read the literature to find out the survival requirements for the fish
that were in your neighbor's pond and to find out about past reasons fish
have died in ponds.
- Multiple Hypotheses
- Come up with as many possible answers to the question as you can.
- The water was too hot, there was not enough oxygen,
there was not enough food, over-harvesting by you neighbor or predators,
toxins, etc.
- Deductions
- For each hypothesis, determine what results (data) would be required to support (or refute) the hypothesis
- Example: If the water was too high, then the water temperature must be above
90 degrees F to kill the fish.
- Tests
- Collect the actual data
- Example: The water temperature in the pond always measured between 71
and 82 degrees.
- Tentative Conclusions
- Compare actual results to deductions for each hypothesis and record which hypotheses were supported and which were refuted in a report for publication.
- Example: One of your tentative conclusions would be that high water temperature most likely was not the cause of the
fish dieoff.
- Peer Review
- Submit your report to a scientific journal. The journal editors give
your report to scientists who critique the scientific soundness and merits
of your report.
3. Rules
- Maximize Sample Size
- Collect data from as large a sample as possible and needed based on
the population's variability and the amount of certainty required.
- Example: if you want to know the average height of PCC students,
you can't just measure the height of 10 students.
- Representative Sample
- Choose the sample you are going to study randomly or systematically
to avoid bias.
- Example: if you want to know the average height of PCC students,
you can't just measure the height of all the basketball players.
- Controlled Studies
- Use when determining the cause of an effect.
- Always have a control group to compare to the experimental group
and always have just one variable be different between the control
group and the experimental group at a time so you can be more sure
that any effects seen in the experimental group that are not seen
in the control group likely arose from that particular cause.