1.1
1.1
1.2
1.2
1.3
100

The factor in an experiment that is deliberately changed by the scientist.


  • What is the independent variable?
100

This step in a scientific investigation involves looking for patterns in data to draw a conclusion.


  • What is data analysis?
100

When a scientist performs multiple trials of their own experiment to ensure accuracy.

 What is repetition?

100

Scientists must provide these detailed, step-by-step instructions so others can replicate their work.


  • What are procedures?
100

 Science is limited to studying this world, not supernatural or opinion-based claims.

  • Question: What is the natural world?
200

This is the standard to which the results of an experiment are compared.


  • What is the control group?
200

Information gathered through the five senses during an experiment.


  • What is an observation?
200

When a different scientist follows the same procedures to see if they get the same results.


  • What is replication?
200

A scientist who averages the results of 10 trials is practicing this.


  • What is repetition?
200

This is the "language" of science, used to collect and report data globally.


  • What is the Metric System (or SI units)?
300

These factors must remain the same throughout an experiment to ensure a fair test.


  • What are constants (or controlled variables)?
300

Unlike an observation, this is a logical interpretation based on prior knowledge and experience.


  • : What is an inference?
300

Doing this helps a scientist identify outliers and ensure their own data is reliable.


  • What is repetition?
300

This process is the ultimate "quality control" in the scientific community


  • Question: What is replication?
300

Even if a hypothesis is "wrong," the experiment is still useful because it provides this.


  • What is evidence (or data)?
400

A testable explanation for an observation that can be used to design an experiment.

What is a hypothesis?

400

This type of investigation involves observing things in their natural environment without manipulating variables.


  • What is systematic observation (or field study)?
400

this fails to happen when another lab tries your experiment, your conclusion may be considered invalid.


  • What is replication?
400

Scientists use this to represent things that are too big, too small, or too complex to study directly.


  • What is a model?
400

Data that is expressed using numbers, such as mass, length, or time.


  • What is quantitative data?
M
e
n
u