Planning an experiment
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👩 Teacher’s Guide
🎯 Objective
Students will be able to:
- Write a clear method that another group can follow
- Choose variables and controls to make a fair test
- Select equipment and repeats to improve reliability
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📝 Teaching Notes
- Key idea to emphasize: Main concept: good planning makes tests fair, repeatable, and reliable.
- Common misconception: Misconception: one measurement is enough to prove a claim.
- Suggested teaching approach:
- Co-write a method with exact quantities and timing.
- Add repeats and decide how to average.
- Build a results table before collecting data.
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💬 Discussion Starter
Ask students:
- Why is evidence more important than opinion in science?
- What makes an experiment a “fair test”?
- How can scientists disagree and still make progress?
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🧒 Student Worksheet
Concept and Helping Material
Planning helps you run a fair, repeatable test. A clear method, sensible range of values, and repeats make results more reliable and easier to interpret.
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Vocabulary and Definitions
- — Step-by-step instructions for an investigation.
- — Doing the same test more than once.
- — How consistent results are when repeated.
- — Only one factor changes while others are controlled.
- — The set of values tested for the independent variable.
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Hands-On Experiment or Activities
Activity 1: Write a Method That Works
What You Need: simple materials (coins, ramp, ruler, timer).
What You Do: Students write a method to test how ramp height affects travel distance; swap methods between groups to test clarity.
Think and Talk: What changed? What stayed the same?
Activity 2: Choose Repeats and Range
What You Need: planning sheet.
What You Do: Given a question, choose a sensible range and number of repeats; explain why.
Think and Talk: What changed? What stayed the same?
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Practice Questions (QA)
1. What makes a test a 'fair test'?
2. Why include repeats in an experiment?
3. What should a good method include?
4. Why decide the range of values before starting?
5. What is the dependent variable?
6. What is a control variable?
7. Why make a results table first?
8. Why should equipment be listed?
9. What is reliability?
10. What is validity?
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Reflection
- How could planning an experiment help you make a better decision in real life?
- What is one habit you can practice to improve your scientific thinking?