How Scientists Think

How Scientists Think

<p> Tutor Use Topic/Objective:______Full Name: ______Only: ______Class: ______Period: ______Date: ______Essential Question:</p><p>Chapter 2 Qualities of Scientific Thinking</p><p>1. Scientists make obserrvations___. 2. They ask _questions_ about what they observe. 3. They make predictions___ about the cause of the things that they observe. 4. Their predictions are based on evidence_ that can be measured and tested. (Prediction= hypothesis) 5. They test their hypothesis_. 6. They communicate their results to their peers_.</p><p>Evidence: _material_ or _data_ that can be measured or tested to verify a prediction or hypothesis.</p><p>Hypothesis: is a tentative explanation for an observation or phenomenon (an “educated guess”)</p><p>How Scientists Think 1. Scientists are _skeptical_. 2. They question _long-held ideas_. 3. They try to prove _new ideas_ and _disprove_ others. 4. As a result, only “correct” interpretations of “reality” stand the “test of time”.</p><p>Scientific Enquiry Scientific Inquiry is a two-component problem-solving process of generating and testing of the hypothesis. The organization of this problem-solving process is called the Scientific Method. (Process-Framework)</p><p>How Scientists Approach Questions</p><p>1. State the problem. 2. Initial Research. 3. Form a Hypothesis or Prediction. 4. Test the Hypothesis. 5. Record and Analyze the data. 6. State a conclusion. 7. Decide whether to repeat or redesign the experiment. 8. Report results to peers and the public.</p><p>Summary:</p><p>Essential Question: Peer Review</p><p>Scientists make the results of their studies available to others for the purpose of: Validating the results of the experiment.</p><p>Scientists publish their ideas in scientific journals_. In order to have their research published, scientists have to submit their work for peer review_.</p><p>Testability separates scientific knowledge from unscientific knowledge.</p><p>Scientific explanations are supported by evidence, and be able to be tested.</p><p>Theory: an explanation for observable events or facts for which no exception has been found</p><p>An example of a theory is: The Big Bang Theory</p><p>Law: generalizations about how the natural world behaves under certain conditions. No exceptions to these generalizations have ever been found.</p><p>An example of a theory is: The Law of Gravity</p><p>Summary:</p>

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