preap chemistry chapter 1 notes. scientific method

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PreAP Chemistry Chapter 1 Notes

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Page 1: PreAP Chemistry Chapter 1 Notes. Scientific Method

PreAP ChemistryChapter 1 Notes

Page 2: PreAP Chemistry Chapter 1 Notes. Scientific Method

Scientific Method

Page 3: PreAP Chemistry Chapter 1 Notes. Scientific Method

Scientific Method

The Scientific Method is a logical approach to solving problems by observing and collecting data, formulating hypotheses, testing hypotheses, and formulating theories that are supported by data.

Page 4: PreAP Chemistry Chapter 1 Notes. Scientific Method

Scientific Method

There are two kinds of data that can be observed and collected: Qualitative and Quantitative.

Page 5: PreAP Chemistry Chapter 1 Notes. Scientific Method

Scientific Method

There are two kinds of data that can be observed and collected: Qualitative and Quantitative.

•Qualitative data is data about qualities, like appearance and behavior.

Page 6: PreAP Chemistry Chapter 1 Notes. Scientific Method

Scientific Method

There are two kinds of data that can be observed and collected: Qualitative and Quantitative.

•Qualitative data is data about qualities, like appearance and behavior.

What qualitative data can be made about this apple?

Page 7: PreAP Chemistry Chapter 1 Notes. Scientific Method

Scientific Method

There are two kinds of data that can be observed and collected: Qualitative and Quantitative.

•Qualitative data is data about qualities, like appearance and behavior.

•Quantitative data is data about quantities, like mass, density, and other numerical amounts.

Page 8: PreAP Chemistry Chapter 1 Notes. Scientific Method

Scientific Method

There are two kinds of data that can be observed and collected: Qualitative and Quantitative.

•Qualitative data is data about qualities, like appearance and behavior.

•Quantitative data is data about quantities, like mass, density, and other numerical amounts.

What quantitative data can be made about these apples?

Page 9: PreAP Chemistry Chapter 1 Notes. Scientific Method

Scientific Method

A hypothesis is based on previously collected data and is an attempt to explain the data, as a testable prediction; if A, then B. (It may not necessarily contain the words “if” and “then”). A hypothesis is tested with an experiment.

Page 10: PreAP Chemistry Chapter 1 Notes. Scientific Method

Scientific Method

A hypothesis is based on previously collected data and is an attempt to explain the data, as a testable prediction; if A, then B. (It may not necessarily contain the words “if” and “then”). A hypothesis is tested with an experiment.

What if we ask:

“Do different colors of light affect the growth of a green bean plant?”

Is this a hypothesis? Is it testable? Is it a prediction?

Page 11: PreAP Chemistry Chapter 1 Notes. Scientific Method

Scientific Method

A hypothesis is based on previously collected data and is an attempt to explain the data, as a testable prediction; if A, then B. (It may not necessarily contain the words “if” and “then”). A hypothesis is tested with an experiment.

What if we ask:

“Do different colors of light affect the growth of a green bean plant?”

Is this a hypothesis? Is it testable? Is it a prediction?

How can this be phrased to be a prediction?

Page 12: PreAP Chemistry Chapter 1 Notes. Scientific Method

Scientific Method

In an experiment, usually the affect of one variable on another is tested. The variable that is being controlled directly by the experimenter is the independent variable. The independent variable should then have an affect on the variable being tested, called the dependent variable.

Page 13: PreAP Chemistry Chapter 1 Notes. Scientific Method

Scientific Method

In an experiment, usually the affect of one variable on another is tested. The variable that is being controlled directly by the experimenter is the independent variable. The independent variable should then have an affect on the variable being tested, called the dependent variable.

What is the I.V.?

What is the D.V.?

Page 14: PreAP Chemistry Chapter 1 Notes. Scientific Method

Scientific Method

Often there are additional variables that can be involved in an experiment, so care should be taken to be sure that these are held constant.

In addition, to judge if the independent variable actually did affect the dependent variable and nothing else, a control situation should be used.

This could be a separate specimen to which the independent variable is purposely held constant or is in the ‘usual’ state, or could be a separate trial of the same experiment, during which the independent variable is held constant or in the ‘usual’ state.

Page 15: PreAP Chemistry Chapter 1 Notes. Scientific Method

What needs to be constant?

What is the control?

Page 16: PreAP Chemistry Chapter 1 Notes. Scientific Method

Scientific Method

If a hypothesis is not disproved after many experiments to test it, then the hypothesis is considered a theory, like gravity or evolution.

Page 17: PreAP Chemistry Chapter 1 Notes. Scientific Method

Scientific Method

If a hypothesis is not disproved after many experiments to test it, then the hypothesis is considered a theory, like gravity or evolution.

Sorry guys, they’re still just theories

Page 18: PreAP Chemistry Chapter 1 Notes. Scientific Method

Graphs

Page 19: PreAP Chemistry Chapter 1 Notes. Scientific Method

Why bar and pie graphs

suck and line graph rules.

lack

Page 20: PreAP Chemistry Chapter 1 Notes. Scientific Method

Bar graphs only show counted objects.

They are not useful for finding connections between variables.

Page 21: PreAP Chemistry Chapter 1 Notes. Scientific Method

Pie (circle) graphs show the parts of the same whole, in percentage form.

They are not useful for finding connections between variables.

Page 22: PreAP Chemistry Chapter 1 Notes. Scientific Method

Line Graph Rules

Page 23: PreAP Chemistry Chapter 1 Notes. Scientific Method

1. Give your graph a title of “dependent variable” versus “independent variable”. This goes neatly at the top and middle of the graph (not necessarily of the piece of paper).

Page 24: PreAP Chemistry Chapter 1 Notes. Scientific Method

2. Label each axis and indicate the units used. The independent variable always goes on the x-axis and the dependent variable always goes on the y-axis.

Page 25: PreAP Chemistry Chapter 1 Notes. Scientific Method

3. Number the axes in equal increments. You don’t have to label every line, but don’t change the amount of spacing of each successive line. Your scale should cause the graph to take up as much (at least 60%) of the graph paper as possible. You do not always have to start the origin at (0,0). Consider each time if it is appropriate or not for that particular graph.

Page 26: PreAP Chemistry Chapter 1 Notes. Scientific Method

DO NOT DO THIS, EVER!

Page 27: PreAP Chemistry Chapter 1 Notes. Scientific Method

4. Locate the data points you place on a graph with an “X” or a dot with a circle around it. This allows the points to be easily seen once the line is drawn.

YES

YESNO

Page 28: PreAP Chemistry Chapter 1 Notes. Scientific Method

5. All line graphs should use best-fit lines that are either a straight line (use a straight edge) or a smooth curve (free-hand carefully). Your data should indicate which type of line to use.

Never use a connect-the-dots line. Your line does not have to go through all your data points (but get it close). This shows the uncertainty associated with each measurement, and takes an average of the data.

Page 29: PreAP Chemistry Chapter 1 Notes. Scientific Method