Scientific Method
Science and Society
Nature of Matter
100

What is the first step of the scientific method?

What is making observations?

100

True or False: Science only affects people who become scientists.

What is false?

100

What are the three subatomic particles found in an atom?

What are protons, neutrons, and electrons?

200

A testable prediction based on observations is called a what?

What is a hypothesis?

200

What is one example of how biology helps improve human health?

Example: developing vaccines or understanding diseases.

200

What part of the atom contains protons and neutrons?

What is the nucleus?

300

What is the difference between the independent and dependent variable in an experiment?

The independent variable is what you change; the dependent variable is what you measure.

300

Why should scientists share their findings with the public?

To increase knowledge, inform decisions, and allow others to build on their work.

300

What is a compound?

Two or more atoms chemically bonded together.

400

Why is it important to have a control group in an experiment?

To have a comparison and see the effect of the independent variable.

400

Name one way science can be influenced by society.

Example: funding decisions, ethical concerns, public interest.

400

What is the main difference between ionic and covalent bonds?

Ionic bonds transfer electrons; covalent bonds share electrons.

500

Identify the independent and dependent variables: A scientist tests how the amount of sunlight affects plant growth.

Independent: amount of sunlight; Dependent: plant growth.

500

Explain how bias can affect scientific research and give an example.

Bias can lead to misleading results; for example, if a scientist only publishes results that support their personal beliefs.

500

Describe how a water molecule forms using covalent bonding.

Each hydrogen shares one electron with oxygen, forming two covalent bonds.