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If a measurable Force moves a measurable MASS a measurable Distance, then a measurable amount of Work has been done.
All materials have mass which should be measurable.
yes
Measurable quantities are vectors or scalars. "Space" is not a measurable quantity. "Volume" is. It's a scalar.
The measurable part of the experiment is the dependent variable. The second part of the hypothesis if you use the If..., then... format.
Nothing.
Measurable/ Make your goal able to be Measured.
The word "measurable" is a hedge. This means "There is no influence, none whatsoever, and when I say that I mean that if there is any influence we can't measure it, not with the equipment we now have." That last bit, which is what the word "measurable" is there for, is there to protect the speaker in case he is wrong.
The goal should be clear, specific, and measurable.
Yes.
Measurable/ make your goal able to be measured.
Specific, measurable, attainable, relevant, and time specific
You can say "c'est un but" to mean "it's a goal" in French.
A poorly written goal is vague, lacks specificity, is not measurable, and does not have a clear time frame for completion.
Creating a measurable goal allows you to track progress, stay motivated, and evaluate success. It gives you a clear target to work towards and helps you determine if you are on track to achieve your objective.
S-specific M-Measurable A-achievable R- relevantT-time bound
A clear goal is measurable; for example, 'we want to be the best at" whatever"' is inferior to: 'we want to win the JD Powers first Place Award in our Category'; 'Safety is our Goal' is inferior to: 'No Lost Time Accidents for One Year'. The problem with Clear Goals is that it is blatantly obvious when you fail. That is also their advantage.