To develop a hypothesis you need to observe and make an educated guess, by starting the sentence with "If...then.....because...."
Both observations and inductive reasoning
False
Yes. The next step is to try and gather enough evidence to support the hypothesis.
A good research hypothesis must first, and most importantly, have a testable hypothesis. The hypothesis should be stated, it is not a question. It should be brief and to the point. Finally, there should some previous research that should be used to help form the hypothesis.
To develop a hypothesis you need to observe and make an educated guess, by starting the sentence with "If...then.....because...."
A hypothesis is an attempt to explain a phenomenon, based on partial information. Developing a hypothesis is finding a method for testing it: identifying something which is more likely to happen if the hypothesis were true and not if it were not. The next part of developing it is to design an experiment which can be used to test these outcomes.
Alfred wegener
Both observations and inductive reasoning
Testing experimentally a hypothesis is the last step.
test your hypothesis.
False
Yes. The next step is to try and gather enough evidence to support the hypothesis.
You are imagining that the process is rigid and unchangeable. Any scientist worth her salt will develop hypotheses whenever she is inspired. She is curious, and she is skilled at observation. She wants to know how something works. Try stopping her from forming a hypothesis!
Reevaluate your hypothesis, or reject the hypothesis. You should also recheck your data.
A good research hypothesis must first, and most importantly, have a testable hypothesis. The hypothesis should be stated, it is not a question. It should be brief and to the point. Finally, there should some previous research that should be used to help form the hypothesis.
That is the normal way it happens