The Weight Change.
The Weight Change.
If some observation units are more important than others then you could give them more weight in any analysis.
The color of the weight at the end of the string. (That's the "bob".)
The Independent/Manipulative variable is the variable that you purposely change, and the Dependent/Responsive variable is the variable that changes as a rest of the Independent variable. You measure the dependent variable to see the effects of the Independent variable.
The independent variable.
This would indicate that there is a linear relationship between manipulating and responding variables.
So that you can know what is the manipulating variable, the controlling variable, and the responding variable! To control the variables!
A manipulative variable is something that you will keep the same.
manipulating one variable to determine if changes in one
it is basically asking what the definition of responding variable is and the book says, The variable that changes because of the manipulated variable is the responding variable.
The independent variable is also known as the manipulated variable. This is the factor manipulated by the experimenter, and it produces one or more results, known as dependent variables.
An Independent variable is what you control; you decide the focus of your experiment and what you control on the independent variable. Dependent variable is what you want to look at or find results for; you decide what you want to see from manipulating your independent variable.
The respond variable in an experiment is the variable that changes as a result of manipulating the experimental variable. It is more commonly called the dependent variable. For example, in an experiment designed to determine whether fertilizer will increase the growth of plants, the respond variable would be the growth of the plants.
See link for the Wikipedia article. The dependent variable is sometimes called response variable, or outcome variable. During what year of school, K thru 12, do kids experience the greatest average change in height (or weight)? You are "manipulating" what year of school a child is in. You aren't making any changes on this-- this is just your independent variable. You are going to measure height change for each child, so a starting and ending measure is needed. Height is the dependent variable.
The independent variable, or manipulating variable always affect the outcome of a dependent, or responsive, variable. For example, i have a fire going, and i want to put it out. I could use a range of materials. The range of materials is the independent variable, while the fire going out or not is the dependent variable. This shows a cause and effect.
variable