Yes, you may use the information in your conclusion to write a revised hypothesis.
Propose another hypothesis; the hypothesis is revised and another experiment is conducted.
yes
1, The hypothesis may have to be revised. 2. The method of accumulating data may be flawed 3. The data may have been contaminated by other sources.
If your hypthesis is not supported, you may need to think about it; it may then be revised and tested again
Yes, you may use the information in your conclusion to write a revised hypothesis.
a. the hypothesis ispartly true but needs to be revised. b. the hypothesis wrong. c. the hypothesis is supported. d. the hypothesis is of no value.
i do not know but it can be somethign yht
Propose another hypothesis; the hypothesis is revised and another experiment is conducted.
yes
A new question in an experiment would be a revised hypothesis.
it is nothing :) teachers wont care if you do it or not it is not needed nor extra credit for your science project :O
1, The hypothesis may have to be revised. 2. The method of accumulating data may be flawed 3. The data may have been contaminated by other sources.
If your hypthesis is not supported, you may need to think about it; it may then be revised and tested again
When a hypothesis is not supported by data, two possibilities exist. The hypothesis can either be rejected and a new one is formulated, or more data is required to retest the hypothesis.
Early version of the Interaction Hypothesis stresses the role of comprehensible input in language acquisition whereas the later version focuses on providing feedback and pushing learners to modify their output.
Scientific theories can be disproved. This is a key part of the scientific method, creating hypothesis that can be disproved if they are incorrect. However, you can never really prove a hypothesis - you can find evidence that either fits or doesn't fit. If it doesn't fit the hypothesis needs to be revised or thrown out. If the evidence supports the hypothesis, there may be something that you are missing which may reject the hypothesis.