Last June
i now this is not the answer but i wont to now to i have a paper to and its asking about it
His achievements include improvements to the telescope and consequent astronomical observations and support for Copernicanism.
The basic methods used by ecologists to study the living world include experimenting, classifying, and modelling, but not observing.
The report should include an introduction, materials and methods, the results and a conclusion. Provide all the necessary details about the experiment or research.
Things that could speed up a chemical reaction include, temperature, nature of the reactants, catalysts, surface area, and concentration. Which of these may apply to your experiment will almost always vary depending on the type of experiment.
Last June
Quantitative observations are the data collected in an experiment, mostly numbers. Qualitative observations would usually include written answers to analysis questions.
The introduction should include a description of the species in the environment in which the experiment is being conducted.
Quantitative observations (as opposed to qualitative observations, which do not include numbers)
Qualitative observations
They always include numbers.
Observations are ideas that explains the authors idea.
To make an observation is to watch the subject in question, for example if you were watching a bird, you would make observations as to what kinds of noises it makes, where it lives, does it have any chicks, what does it eat....those are all different kinds of observations. While performing an experiment, observations may include smells, weighing the object, what happens when another thing is added to the solution or whatever.
To make an observation is to watch the subject in question, for example if you were watching a bird, you would make observations as to what kinds of noises it makes, where it lives, does it have any chicks, what does it eat....those are all different kinds of observations. While performing an experiment, observations may include smells, weighing the object, what happens when another thing is added to the solution or whatever.
1. Title 2. Aim - What you will be investigating in your experiment 3. Hypothesis/Prediction - What you think the outcome will be 4. Materials - What you need in order to do the experiment 5. Procedure/Method - What steps did you take to do the experiment 6. Results/Observations - You may also include a diagram or graph 7. Analysis - Discuss what happened and why you think this happened
According to scientists, the different types of scientific observations include natural and staged observations as well as quantitative and qualitative observations.
a control group assures that an experiment will be repeatable