Scientists carry out scientific investigations to try to answer questions. A scientific investigation follows a general plan called the scientific method. The scientific method is a series of logical steps for testing a possible answer to a question. The steps of the scientific method are described below. Note that these steps are meant as a guide, not a rigid sequence. - Make observations. Observations refer to anything detected with one or more senses. - Ask a question raised by the observations. - Form a hypothesis. A hypothesis is a potential, testable answer to a... Show more Scientists carry out scientific investigations to try to answer questions. A scientific investigation follows a general plan called the scientific method. The scientific method is a series of logical steps for testing a possible answer to a question. The steps of the scientific method are described below. Note that these steps are meant as a guide, not a rigid sequence. - Make observations. Observations refer to anything detected with one or more senses. - Ask a question raised by the observations. - Form a hypothesis. A hypothesis is a potential, testable answer to a scientific question. - Test the hypothesis. Make predictions based on the hypothesis and then determine if they are correct. This may involve carrying out an experiment. - Analyze the results of the test and draw a conclusion. Do the results agree with the predictions? If so, they provide support for the hypothesis. If not, they disprove the hypothesis. - Communicate the results. This can be done in posters, papers, or publications. Communicating the results allows other scientists to try to replicate them. Show less
Scientists carry out scientific investigations to try to answer questions. A scientific investigation follows a general plan called the scientific method. The scientific method is a series of logical steps for testing a possible answer to a question. The steps of the scientific method are described below. Note that these steps are meant as a guide, not a rigid sequence. - Make observations. Observations refer to anything detected with one or more senses. - Ask a question raised by the observations. - Form a hypothesis. A hypothesis is a potential, testable answer to a scientific question. - Test the hypothesis. Make predictions based on the hypothesis and then determine if they are correct. This may involve carrying out an experiment. - Analyze the results of the test and draw a conclusion. Do the results agree with the predictions? If so, they provide support for the hypothesis. If not, they disprove the hypothesis. - Communicate the results. This can be done in posters, papers, or publications. Communicating the results allows other scientists to try to replicate them.
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