You guess what the results should be.
You look at your hypotheses and choose which one you like best.
You keep making different tests until they show what you want to see.
You compare the data from your experimental results to the prediction they tested.
Whatever the teacher tells you is the truth.
Your best “educated guess” of what the answer to your question will be.
An experiment.
An untestable statement.
A prediction always needs more than a single hypothesis.
Hypotheses always come in pairs.
If you reject your sole hypothesis you have nothing left.
Observations trick you into trying only one hypothesis.
Hypothesis
Test
Observation
Prediction
A prediction is what the doctors gives you in her clinic, and a test is what the weatherman gives you each evening.
A prediction is a possible answer to the question, and a test is what you take at the end of the semester in class.
A prediction is what a fortune teller gets paid for, and a test is what you give to your friends to make sure they are still your friends.
A prediction is usually a specific statement “if . . .then”, and the test is the actual experiment used to obtain data.
Another word for observation.
To force a conclusion based on many data.
What you think will be the outcome of your experiment or data collection.
Just another word for a hypothesis.
By testing the data.
Assume that you know everything.
By making an interesting observation.
From the predictions.
Conclusion
Making an observation
Developing a test
Forming a hypothesi
A question is the summary of data collected and the hypothesis is the interpretation of the data
A question is an assumption and the hypothesis is the answer to the assumption.
A question is what you end up with after the test and the hypothesis is a summary of the conclusions.
A question follows from an interesting observation and the hypothesis is an educated guess or answer to that questiony
Communication of results
Hypothesis formation