Scientific Method
Across
- 2. method of watching for the outcome of an experiment.
- 5. Something made up of one or more atoms.
- 8. a plausible or scientifically acceptable general principle or body of principles offered to explain phenomena.
- 9. what happens in and experiment
- 12. also called reliability.
- 16. the portion of an experiment that may be changed in order to observe reactions and compare conclusions.
- 18. factual information collected during an experiment through testing or observation, which is then used as a basis for reasoning, discussion, or calculation.
- 19. A quality, characteristic, or trait of a thing or person. For example the texture of food.
- 21. The movement of molecules and ions from places where there are lots of them to places where there are fewer of them.
- 22. an educated guess, based on your knowledge and experience, about what will happen in an experiment
- 23. The portion of the experiment which remains constant throughout any variable changes, allowing an experiment to study one variable at a time.
Down
- 1. The movement of water molecules across a barrier, such as a cell membrane, that lets some (but not all) kinds of molecules through.
- 3. one of the primary goals of the scientific method is to ----- -------(2 words)
- 4. When scientists conduct experiments, their "--------" are the people whose reactions or responses they are studying.
- 6. The portion of an experiment which occurs in response to the change in the independent variable(s).
- 7. a tentative assumption made in order to draw out and test its logical or empirical consequences. Often referred to as and "educated guess."
- 10. an operation or procedure carried out under controlled conditions in order to discover an unknown effect or law, to test or establish a hypothesis, or to illustrate a known law.
- 11. scientist change or ----------- the independent variables during an experiment to test their ideas.
- 13. a plan that is followed in performing a scientific experiment and writing up the results.
- 14. what food feels like in your hand or in your mouth.
- 15. reasoning used to move from premises to conclusions, where the conclusion must be true if all the premises are true.
- 17. When the subjects of an experiment do not know what is being tested.
- 20. The extent to which the measurements of a test remain consistent over repeated tests of the same subject under identical conditions. An experiment is reliable if it yields consistent results of the same measure.