Unit 1 Overview – Intro, Safety, Inquiry

Unit 1 involves planning and implementing field and laboratory investigations using scientific method, analyzing information, making informed decisions, and using to tools to collect and record information. Students also will research contributions made by scientists and inventors and their impact on society.

Topics:

  • Lab safety, lab equipment, scientific method, process of inquiry, inventors, inventions

Concepts:

  • Discovery, exploration, cooperation, investigation, procedure, methods, research

Guiding Questions:

  • How does using the scientific method enable students to discover and explore, by working in cooperative groups, the correct procedures for investigations?
  • How have the investigations of other impacted or contributed to our world today?

Essential Facts:

  • Repeated investigations produce more reliable results.
  • Cooperative groups involve sharing responsibilities I lab investigations.
  • There are safe and proper ways to use laboratory equipment.
  • The process of inquiry involves observing, measuring, inferring, predicting, making models, communicating, classifying, defining operationally, and investigating.
  • Inventions have improved our society.

Nature of Science

Number one safety rule – Tell the Teacher!

Hazard – danger

Precaution – something done to prevent an accident

Always use goggles when working with – liquids

Experiments can only have ONEvariable (thing that is changing) because it is what you are testing. For example, if you want to know which brand of bubble gum makes the biggest bubbles, the only thing different (the variable) would be the rand of the bubble gum. EVERYTHING else has to be the same: same person chewing the same number of times with all the brands and blowing the bubble with the same force each time in the same environment.

Balance – a dual-pan or triple-beam balance used to measure mass

Beaker – glass container that holds liquids while they are being stirred or hearted

Collecting net – a new used to collect samples in field investigations

Compass – a device used to show which direction is north

Filter – a device used to separate the parts of a mixture by passing the mixture through it (coffee filter, screen)

Funnel – a cone-shaped tool used to assist in transferring liquids to container with small openings

Graduated cylinder – a cylinder used to accurately measure the volume of liquids

Hand lens – a lens that magnifies objects, but is not as powerful as a microscope

Microscope – a laboratory instrument used to magnify extremely small objects so we can see them

Model – something that is made to represent something else; making the size of the objects and the distances accurate will improve the model

Petri dish – a round, flat dish with lid used to hold small specimens that are to be observed and collected

Rain gauge – a weather instrument that measures rainfall

Safety goggles – special plastic glasses that cover the eyes to protect the during experiments that involve liquids

Telescope – a tool for observing distant objects

Temperature – a measure of how hot or cold something is

Testable question – a question that can be answered with a scientific experiment

Test Tube – glass cylinder used to heat chemicals or objects

Texture – how rough or smooth an object is

Thermometer – an instrument used to measure temperature in degrees

Volume – the amount of space an object takes up

Weight – the measure of pull of gravity on an object

Data – information gathered during an experiment

Scientific Process:

  1. Ask a question that can be answered with an experiment
  2. Hypothesis – an educated guess about what will happen
  3. Materials – a complete list of all items needed and amounts needed for an experiment
  4. Procedure – a simple and clear step by step list of instructions to follow to complete an experiment
  5. Results – the data collected during an experiment usually displayed in a graph or chart
  6. Conclusion – a short paragraph stating whether the hypothesis was correct, why or why not, and what you could do next if you wanted to experiment further