The Question
Your science fair project
starts with a question. This might be based on an observation you have
made or a particular topic that interests you. Think what you hope to
discover during your investigation, what question would you like to
answer? Your question needs to be about something you can measure and
will typically start with words such as what, when, where, how or why.
Talk to your science
teacher and use resources such as books and the Internet to perform
background research on your question. Gathering information now will
help prepare you for the next step in the Scientific Method.
Hypothesis
Using your background
research and current knowledge, make an educated guess that answers your
question. Your hypothesis should be a simple statement that expresses
what you think will happen.
Experiment
Create a step by step
procedure and conduct an experiment that tests your hypothesis. The
experiment should be a fair test that changes only one variable at a
time while keeping everything else the same. Repeat the experiment a
number of times to ensure your original results weren’t an accident.
Data
Collect data and record
the progress of your experiment. Document your results with detailed
measurements, descriptions and observations in the form of notes,
journal entries, photos, charts and graphs.
Observations
Describe the observations
you made during your experiment. Include information that could have
affected your results such as errors, environmental factors and
unexpected surprises.
Conclusions
Analyze the data you
collected and summarize your results in written form. Use your analysis
to answer your original question, do the results of your experiment
support or oppose your hypothesis?
Communication
Present your findings in
an appropriate form, whether it’s a final report for a scientific
journal, a poster for school or a display board for a science fair
competition.
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