Are you talking about outcomes? Because I do not think that there is any particular word!
Because then you can assess how valid your results are =D
Getting lots and lots of results for say an experiment then deducing a conclusion from them, compared with doing just a few really precise measurements with a few accurate results and deducing your conclusion from that. The same principle could be applied to surveys etc. also
Gathering data is essential to any experiment. The data helps you comes up with results from your experiment so you can analyze them later for future studies. Without them, there would have been no point doing the experiment to begin with.
Karen and Jose are doing an experiment with a spinner and a coin.they spin the pointer on the spinner and flip the coin.then they record the results.they will repeat this experiment 15 times.show how they could organize a table about this experiment.
The experimental probability of anything cannot be answered without doing it, because that is what experimental probability is - the probability that results from conducting an experiment, a posteri. This is different than theoretical probability, which can be computed a priori. For instance, the theoretical probability of rolling a 3 is 1 in 6, or about 0.1667, but the experimental probability changes every time you run the experiment
it means you made a mistake
When doing a controlled experiment, you get accurate results.
It tells you how accurate your results are. If you do the experiment multiple times and get different results, then there is something wrong with the experiment or what you are measuring. Its just like a survey, the more people you ask, the closer to the actual population opinion you get.
avoid fluke results
When you collect data is when you are trying to figure something out. Say you are doing an experiment. You would want to collect data so that you could see the results of the experiment. Why you want to collect data is so that you can see your results of whatever you are doing, whether it is an experiment or an inquiry.
Because then you can assess how valid your results are =D
It depends, if you are doing an experiment on temperatures of water in nature, you will need it. If you are doing an experiment on how fast different species of turtles can walk, you don't.
No, a result is something that happens because of something else. A conclusion is a desicion that you come to.
The independent variable is the factor changed by the scientists.The dependent variable (think of it like this: it dependson the results of the experiment) is what is measured.
Getting lots and lots of results for say an experiment then deducing a conclusion from them, compared with doing just a few really precise measurements with a few accurate results and deducing your conclusion from that. The same principle could be applied to surveys etc. also
Scientists, like everyone else, are imperfect. You cannot be absolutely sure that you have not made a mistake or overlooked something when you do an experiment, but if you do it several times and get the same result, then you can be more confident that you did it correctly. If you do it several times and get different results, that is a clue that tells you that there is something about the experiment that you have failed to understand.
Gathering data is essential to any experiment. The data helps you comes up with results from your experiment so you can analyze them later for future studies. Without them, there would have been no point doing the experiment to begin with.