Want this question answered?
Scientists do scientific inquiry.
a well tested explanation for a wide range of observations or expiremental results
The National Science Education Standards define scientific inquiry as "the diverse ways in which scientists study the natural world and propose explanations based on the evidence derived from their work. Scientific inquiry also refers to the activities through which students develop knowledge and understanding of scientific ideas, as well as an understanding of how scientists study the natural world." DEPENDS ON GRADE LEVLE
The Scientific Method
Answering a question can be done by simply stating your opinion on an issue or by giving what you believe to be the proper answer. A science inquiry on the other hand requires you stick to established scientific methods of inquiry (read available scientific literature on the issue, find out what scientific consensus currently is, take into account credible alternative hypothesis, do scientific research, etc.) and the outcome of scientific inquiry does not necessarily have to coincide with what your opinion on the issue was before you started the inquiry.
An increase in scientific inquiry
Scientists do scientific inquiry.
after they have collected there results
Scientific inquiry begins with safety.
a well tested explanation for a wide range of observations or expiremental results
Scientific inquiry is aimed at being as objective as possible in order to reduce bias. Rene Descartes was famous for establishing the guiding principles of scientific method in his book "Discourse on Method". The main goal of scientific inquiry is to obtain knowledge through a systematic approach of testing, observing, and measuring hypotheses, so that one can predict the results of future experiments.
Scientific inquiry is carried out in a uniform and organized manner. This process is known as the scientific method and uses the following steps: ask a question, do background research, form a hypothesis, do experiments to test the hypothesis, compile the results and reach a conclusion, and communicate your finding.
Communicating is sharing your discovery that you learned from your experiment through scientific inquiry.
The process of conducting scientific inquiry is commonly referred to as the Scientific Method. This is a method that requires the researcher to ask a question, research, form a hypothesis, test that hypothesis by experimenting, analyze the data received, form a conclusion, and communicate the results of the findings.
Any scientific inquiry necessarily involves observation and reasoning.
Scientific inquiry is carried out in a uniform and organized manner. This process is known as the scientific method and uses the following steps: ask a question, do background research, form a hypothesis, do experiments to test the hypothesis, compile the results and reach a conclusion, and communicate your finding.
This question does not need scientific inquiry.