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4 answers

YOU don't need one," rather my sisters boys project is due TOMORROW and he lost his layout"?

Here's a great project, show up without a project and he will give a demonstration of how he may have "lost" it and let the other kids walk him through his steps like a detective, bring in a map of the house and a timeline of where/when he was.

Basically he's screwed and the best lesson he can learn at this late moment is responsibility, not science.

2006-11-13 09:19:15 · answer #1 · answered by gentltailya 2 · 0 0

The standard scientific method layout is:

Question. You have to have a question to answer and to attempt to prove or disprove in experiment.
Hypothesis: What the student thinks the answer is.
Prediction: If the hypothesis is true, then list what happens
List materials & equipment.
Testing: you perform the experiment and list all the controls and variables, record the data.
Observation: Observe what's happening during the experiment
Draw conclusions: try to get the answer to the initial question. Was the theory proved or disproved?

2006-11-13 09:20:58 · answer #2 · answered by hannahw 2 · 0 0

The above answer is about right. Except, you don't just make conclusions automatically. You usually use the data to then rework your hypothesis and do the whole experiment over with the new hypothesis.

2006-11-13 09:58:57 · answer #3 · answered by retzy 4 · 0 0

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