Scientific Method
📊 Evidence-Based Practice
📚 Research Literacy
🧠 Experimental Design Terms
💬 Reflection & Application
100

What is a hypothesis?

A testable prediction or educated guess.

100

What is evidence-based training?

Using scientific research and data to guide training decisions.

100

What is the purpose of a literature review in research?

To understand what is already known and identify gaps.

100

What is a control variable?

A variable that is kept constant throughout the experiment.

100

Why is it important to control variables in an experiment?

To isolate the effect of the independent variable.

200

What is an independent variable?  

The variable that is changed or controlled in an experiment.

200

Give example of evidence-based training practice

Dynamic stretching before workouts instead of static stretching.

200

Define qualitative and quantitative data

Qualitative: descriptive, non-numeric; Quantitative: numeric, measurable.

200

What is validity?

The extent to which the experiment measures what it claims to measure.

200

What is one example of a control group in a training study?

A group that does not receive the training program.

300

What is a dependent variable?

The variable being tested and measured.

300

Benefits of evidence-based training

Safer, more effective, more personalized, avoids fads.

300

What is a placebo?

A fake treatment used to compare against the real one.

300

What is reliability?

The consistency of results across repeated experiments.

300

How do professionals apply research findings to training programs?

They modify plans based on proven effective strategies.

400

6 steps of the scientific method

Ask a question, do background research, construct a hypothesis, test with an experiment, analyze data, draw a conclusion.

400

Three pillars of evidence-based practice

Best available evidence, clinical expertise, client values.

400

What is an abstract?

A short summary of the entire study.

400

What is a sample size and why does it matter?

Larger samples improve reliability and reduce bias.

400

What is the difference between anecdotal evidence and scientific evidence?

Anecdotal is personal stories; scientific is tested and peer-reviewed.

500

 Why is replication important in scientific studies?

It confirms the reliability and validity of results.

500

What is an example of a fitness myth that science has disproved?

Crunches are the best way to get six-pack abs

500

Correlation vs. causation

Correlation is a relationship; causation means one causes the other.

500

What role does peer review play in research?

It ensures accuracy and validity before publication.

500

Takeaway from this week (open-ended)

Answers will vary.

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