No, the hypothesis is the question about the experiment. The conclusion is the sum up of what was learned from an experiment.
A conclusion :)
Scientific experiment must be conduct where the result of the hypothesis tested must be accurate, repeatable - reproducible and without bias. To sum up to the requirement, set of the methods and norm is sum up and become scientific methodology. Without accuracy, repeatability and credibility then the experiment would worth nothing.
Discussion follows your main topic sentence of your results from your experiment. In the discussion, you describe the hypothesis you were trying to prove with the experiment, bring up any literature that supports your hypothesis - or not - and what happened during the experiment. Be sure to include how you set up the experiment.
The hardest part in setting up an experiment usually depends on the nature of the experiment. However, the most critical part of setting up an experiment is forming a testable hypothesis.
a. conclusion b.hypothesis c. data d. measurement
A conclusion :)
The outcome of an experiment is a "conclusion", the interpretation of the results compared with the expected results and the goal of the experiment.
answer the hypothesis
when there s proof to back it up with evidence or an experiment to test the hypothesis
Scientific experiment must be conduct where the result of the hypothesis tested must be accurate, repeatable - reproducible and without bias. To sum up to the requirement, set of the methods and norm is sum up and become scientific methodology. Without accuracy, repeatability and credibility then the experiment would worth nothing.
Scientific experiment must be conduct where the result of the hypothesis tested must be accurate, repeatable - reproducible and without bias. To sum up to the requirement, set of the methods and norm is sum up and become scientific methodology. Without accuracy, repeatability and credibility then the experiment would worth nothing.
A hypothesis is an educational guess so when you make a hypothesis you'll want to do an experiment to figure out if your hypothesis. And that leads you to conclusion. And also if you're making a science fair project soon add your hypothesis. hope this helps!
Discussion follows your main topic sentence of your results from your experiment. In the discussion, you describe the hypothesis you were trying to prove with the experiment, bring up any literature that supports your hypothesis - or not - and what happened during the experiment. Be sure to include how you set up the experiment.
when there s proof to back it up with evidence or an experiment to test the hypothesis
The hardest part in setting up an experiment usually depends on the nature of the experiment. However, the most critical part of setting up an experiment is forming a testable hypothesis.
a. conclusion b.hypothesis c. data d. measurement
A hypothesis is your best educated guess on what the outcome of the science fair project is going to be. So you would first need to come up with the science experiment that you want to do before you can come up with your hypothesis. Example: if your science project was mixing baking soda and vinegar together to see what type of reaction you will get, your hypothesis is your guess on what is going to happen when you mix the baking soda and vinegar together. So my hypothesis for that experiment of mixing baking soda and vinegar together is that it will foam up and overflow from the container that I mixed them in. If that happens then my hypothesis was correct. So you need to have an experiment in mind before you can make your hypothesis for the experiment.