Catalyst – August 2+21, 2010 1. What question is this data table answering? 2. What is one...

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Catalyst – August 2+21, 2010 Monday Mystery Element! 1. Isolated first by British scientist Henry Cavendish 2. Element name means “water” “creator” 3. Predominant element in stars

Transcript of Catalyst – August 2+21, 2010 1. What question is this data table answering? 2. What is one...

Page 1: Catalyst – August 2+21, 2010 1. What question is this data table answering? 2. What is one conclusion we can make from looking at this data table? 3.

Catalyst – August 2+21, 2010Monday Mystery Element!

1. Isolated first by British scientist Henry Cavendish

2. Element name means “water” “creator”

3. Predominant element in stars

Page 2: Catalyst – August 2+21, 2010 1. What question is this data table answering? 2. What is one conclusion we can make from looking at this data table? 3.

Catalyst – August 2+21, 2010Monday Mystery

Element!

1. Isolated first by British scientist Henry Cavendish

2. Element name means “water” “creator”

3. Predominant element in stars HYDROGE

N!!

Page 3: Catalyst – August 2+21, 2010 1. What question is this data table answering? 2. What is one conclusion we can make from looking at this data table? 3.

HydrogenHydrogen

• Light weight, very flammable (good/bad combo for blimps; 1937)

•Basis of the atomic bomb

•Potential energy source

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Today’s Agenda

Catalyst Variables Notes and Practice Time

I-N-D-E-P-E-N-D-E-N-T! DEPENDENT CONSTANTS

Exit QuestionHOMEWORK TONIGHT!QUIZ ON THURSDAY!

Page 5: Catalyst – August 2+21, 2010 1. What question is this data table answering? 2. What is one conclusion we can make from looking at this data table? 3.

Today’s Objectives

SWBAT identify independent, dependent, and constant variables in a scientific experiment.

Page 6: Catalyst – August 2+21, 2010 1. What question is this data table answering? 2. What is one conclusion we can make from looking at this data table? 3.

White Board Door into classL R

3rd Period

Group 4

Melvin, Kendell,

Marissa, Shawn

Group 3

Chicobi, Kara, Bao

Group 1

Corey, Amber, Jasmine, Quanetta

Group 2

Sara, Brandon, Ebony,

Alessandro

Group 5

Ronald, Paula, Jamie, Warren

Group 6

Ariel, Waynell, Tashelle, David

Group 8 Group 7Group 9

Page 7: Catalyst – August 2+21, 2010 1. What question is this data table answering? 2. What is one conclusion we can make from looking at this data table? 3.

White Board Door into classL R

4th Period

Group 4

Lyndon, Rodrea,

Shannon, Chelsie

Group 3

Kentrell, Brittany,

Roniece, Daniel

Group 1

Jon, Jytte’, Jaron,

Stephanie

Group 2

Josh’shawn, Sam, Artrel, Kourtney

Group 5

Ronald, Paula, Jamie, Warren

Group 6

Caleb, Aaron, Kim, Lizzeh

Group 8

Group 7

Khallid, Eddie, Infinity

Group 9

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This Week’s Agenda

Monday: Variables Tuesday: Procedures Wednesday: Lab Safety, Mystery

Goo Lab! Thursday: Quiz 1.1 Friday: How to Be a Real Life

Scientist

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Experimentation

Key Point #1: A proper experiment always has an independent variable and dependent variable. The purpose of an experiment is to test how changing ONE THING affects something else.

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Variables

Independent Variable: what causes the change we are measuring (acts independently)

Dependent variable: what gets changed (depends on other things)

Remember!!!! Variables are always CATEGORIES of

things: time, amount, frequency, size, type Variables are NEVER specific things!!!

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Demo

http://www.unitedstreaming.com/videos/dsc/externalApplications/virtual_labs-es/Plants/index.html

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Teacher Models

Scientists have discovered something shocking: if you eat a lot of hanburgers, then you will gain fat. What is the independent variable?A. Eat a lot of hamburgersB. Type of hamburger you eat (McDonald’s,

Wendy’s, Burger King, etc.)C. Amount of hamburgers you eatD. How much weight you gain

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Teacher Models

Well-rested students learn more in school. So, Ms. Stroh believes that starting school later would increase test scores. What is the dependent variable?A. Starting school laterB. Well-rested studentsC. Time that school startsD. Test scores

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NEW PROCEDURE!

WHITEBOARDS!

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Whiteboard Practice

When Ms. Stroh says “GO!” Send one member of your group

to get whiteboards, erasers, and markers for everyone (back lab bench)

Hurry! Remember, we want to stay under 3 minutes of transition time!

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Whiteboards 1

Ms. Stroh believes that the more you study, the better grades you’ll earn. What is the independent variable?A. Studying moreB. Amount of time you studyC. Grade earnedD. Type of test

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Whiteboards 2

Shanel is always cold in class. She hypothesizes that if she wears many layers of clothing to school, then she will be warmer. What is the dependent variable?A. Number of layers Shanel wearsB. How warm Shanel isC. Temperature of the roomD. Shanel will be warmer

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Whiteboards 3

Ms. Stroh’s students want to test how easily bought off she is. Students who give her an apple get a “C.” Students who give her candy get an “A.” What is the independent variable?A. Type of food given to Ms. StrohB. Apples and candyC. “A” on the report cardD. Report card

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Whiteboards 4

Tashica hates cooking, but loves listening to music. She believes that if she listens to music while cooking, then she will cook more often. What is the dependent variable?A. She will cook more oftenB. Listens to music while cookingC. Frequency that Tashica cooksD. What Tashica listens to

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If you’re having trouble…

4 minutes 26 mg of baking

soda Lifting weights

every day Medium t-shirts Bullfrog 16 candles Never gets sick

Time to get dressed Amount of baking

soda Frequency of lifting

weights Size of t-shirts Type of frog Number of candles Degree of health

WRONG RIGHT

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Review

Ms. Stroh believes that the more you study, the better grades you’ll earn. What is the independent variable?A. Studying moreB. Amount of time you studyC. Grade earnedD. Type of test

Page 22: Catalyst – August 2+21, 2010 1. What question is this data table answering? 2. What is one conclusion we can make from looking at this data table? 3.

Review

Shanel is always cold in class. She hypothesizes that if she wears many layers of clothing to school, then she will be warmer. What is the dependent variable?A. Number of layers Shanel wearsB. How warm Shanel isC. Temperature of the roomD. Shanel will be warmer

Page 23: Catalyst – August 2+21, 2010 1. What question is this data table answering? 2. What is one conclusion we can make from looking at this data table? 3.

Review

Ms. Stroh’s students want to test how easily bought off she is. Students who give her an apple get a “C.” Students who give her candy get an “A.” What is the independent variable?A. Type of food given to Ms. StrohB. Apples and candyC. “A” on the report cardD. Report card

Page 24: Catalyst – August 2+21, 2010 1. What question is this data table answering? 2. What is one conclusion we can make from looking at this data table? 3.

Review

Tashica hates cooking, but loves listening to music. She believes that if she listens to music while cooking, then she will cook more often. What is the dependent variable?A. She will cook more oftenB. Listens to music while cookingC. Frequency that Tashica cooksD. What Tashica listens to

Page 25: Catalyst – August 2+21, 2010 1. What question is this data table answering? 2. What is one conclusion we can make from looking at this data table? 3.

Guided Practice Worksheet

10 minutes to complete3 minutes to compare answers

KEEP THIS to help you with homework tonight

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Constants

Key Point #2: Everything but the independent and dependent variable must be kept constant. Constant: variable we keep the same

If many different things change at once, we don’t know what causes the change!

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Example

Let’s say we want to design an experiment to determine what causes the Hornets to win games.

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Number of games that

Hornets win

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Try this one! Answer in notes… Travie McCoy hypothesizes that if he

write more songs about being rich, then he will sell more CDs because his listeners also want to be rich. What is the IV? What is the DV? What are the constants?

Remember, variables are CATEGORIES.

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If Travie write more songs about being rich, then he will sell more CDs because his listeners also want to be rich.

IV Number of songs about being rich How often Travie sings about being rich Amount of times Travie sings about money

DV Number of CDs Travie sells How many CDs Travie sells

Constant Amount of money CDs cost Number of tracks on each CD How good each CD is

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Practice

You want to know when in the year there are the most love bugs. Every night, you record how many love bugs you find outside.

IV =

DV =

Constant =

Time of year (season/month)

Amount of fireflies

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Practice

Maria needs to run a 6 minute mile to pass PE. She believes that if she runs every day, then she will be able to run faster.

IV =

DV =

Constant =

Frequency that Maria runs

Mile time

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Practice

Students of different genders were given the same puzzle to assemble. The puzzle assembly time was measured.

IV =

DV =

Constant =

Type of gender

Time to assemble puzzle

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If there are more students, then there

will be more school bus drivers.

IV =

DV =

Constant =

Amount of students

Number of school bus drivers

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If the amount of sugar used on beignets decreases, then less beignets will be sold.

What depends on what?

IV =

DV =

Constant =

Amount of sugar usedNumber of beignets sold

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IV = Number of games won

DV = Number of players attracted

Constant =

If the Saints win more games, then they will attract more big name players.

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Conclusion

A proper experiment always has an independent variable and dependent variable. Everything but the independent and dependent variable must be kept constant. Independent Variable: what causes the

change we are measuring Dependent variable: what gets changed Constant: variable we keep the same

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Exit Question

Let’s say you want to figure out if drinking milk actually makes you taller. So you drink a glass of milk every day, and record your height every day.

1. What is the independent variable?2. What is the dependent variable?3. What are at least two constants?

Write in complete sentences!

Don’t talk during the Exit Question!