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WELCOME TO: MRS. HARRIS’ SCIENCE CLASS Find your seat by looking at the name on the student information sheet. Then begin filling out your student information sheet. You may put your kleenexes/paper towels and hand sanitizer in the back of my room.

WELCOME TO: MRS. HARRIS’ SCIENCE CLASS Find your seat by looking at the name on the student information sheet. Then begin filling out your student information

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Page 1: WELCOME TO: MRS. HARRIS’ SCIENCE CLASS Find your seat by looking at the name on the student information sheet. Then begin filling out your student information

WELCOME TO:MRS. HARRIS’ SCIENCE

CLASS

Find your seat by looking at the name on the student information sheet. Then

begin filling out your student information sheet.

You may put your kleenexes/paper towels and hand sanitizer in the back of

my room.

Page 2: WELCOME TO: MRS. HARRIS’ SCIENCE CLASS Find your seat by looking at the name on the student information sheet. Then begin filling out your student information

Good morning

If you have not filled out your Section 2 Table of Contents,

do so now

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SCIENCE JOURNAL

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I. Section 1 – Notes

A. Notes will be taken & tests will primarily come from the notes

B. Table of Contents will be filled out before taking notes

C. Each entry on notebook paper must have a date & Page #

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II. SECTION 2 - papers

A. All the papers from the unit will be given to you ahead of time.

B. Each page should be # and dated

C. Each entry in the table of contents needs to be labeled, #, and dated

D. ALL PAPERS NEED TO BE KEPT UNTIL THE END OF A 9 WEEKS –

E. Journal will be graded as a test grade

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III. Section 3 – Flashback (BEST) questions/ Probe activities

A. Flashback (BEST) questions – on Post-Test 1. 1 or 2 questions completed at the beginning of each class period; Questions will be from previous content or will work on college- readiness skills of data & graph interpretion 2. Each question worth 2 pts. – graded by shoulder partner & turned in at the end of 9 wk for a grade from shoulder partner

B. Probe Activities – thinking activities prior to a lesson; usually work with shoulder partners

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SCIENCE BASICS

A. Science – “scire” = to know

B. Science – knowledge obtained & tested through the scientific method

1. known facts

2. always changing

3. answers questions

4. can be applied to life

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C. Areas- “ology”: study of

-------- Science --------

Ex. Biology, zoology, meteorology, geology, cytology, physiology, paleontology, astronomy, herpetology

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D. Observation – use all senses;

- sight

- smell

- taste

- hearing

- touch

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1. Qualitatative – descriptions – ex. Round, blue, soft, etc.

2. Quantitative – numbers,

measurements; gathering data

ex. 25 ml, 50 cm, 37oC, 5 N

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SCIENTIFIC METHOD -

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II. Scientific Method – (SHEC)A. State the Problem/Gather Information

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State problem (ask question)

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B. Hypothesis – educated, testable guess

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Hypothesis

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C. Experiment – test/analyze data

1. control – do nothing to; used for comparison

2. test 1 variable – thing you test –

try to test 1 thing at a time

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a. independent variable – variable being changed; ex. giving a headache medicine; fertilizer put tomatoes;

x-axis (on the bottom)

b. dependent variable – observed result of the independent variable being changed; ex. time it takes for headache to be gone; size of tomatoes;

y- axis (on the side)

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3. repeat many times/use large #s

ex. test 20 times; use thousands of subjects

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Design and Conduct an Experiment

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Analyze the Results of an Experiment

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D. Conclusions are drawn

- Is circular

State problem

Hypothesis

Conclusions

Experiment

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Conclusions

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III. Tools/MeasurementsA. meter stick/ruler: measures length –

units: m or cm

area = l x w

B. thermometer: temperature – oC or K

1. Kelvin = oC + 273 or Celsius = K- 273

2. Absolute Zero (0 K) = all molecular movement stops

ex. 10 C + 273 = 283 K

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C. balance: measures mass – units: grams

1. mass – amt. of substance

2. weight - force of gravity on mass

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Mass and Weight

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D. graduated cylinder, beaker or ruler: measures volume – unit: l, ml or cm3

1 ml = 1 cm3

volume determined by:

1. looking at volume (@ bottom of meniscus or dip)

2. displacement (or bathtub) method – how much volume moves up

3. V = l x w x h (use ruler – cm3)

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E. balance/grad. Cyl. (or ruler) = finds density: mass/volume – units:

g/ml or g/cm3

ex. 5 grams

2.5 ml = 2 g/ml

ex. 10 grams

20 cm3 = .5 g/cm3

Page 29: WELCOME TO: MRS. HARRIS’ SCIENCE CLASS Find your seat by looking at the name on the student information sheet. Then begin filling out your student information
Page 30: WELCOME TO: MRS. HARRIS’ SCIENCE CLASS Find your seat by looking at the name on the student information sheet. Then begin filling out your student information

F. spring scale – measures force/weight: units newtons (n)

G. barometer – measures air pressure – units mm or atm

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H. Microscope – views small items