You need to consider the results, your hypothesis, and the variables and controls used throughout the experiment.
the variables and the facts so you don't make any mistakes about the conclusion.
(A) What you did in your experiments? (B) What was your plan? (C) How you did your experiment? All of these are the conclusion that you can use. Well actually you have to use all of these. To figure and what you will have to write in your experiment for your conclusion.
An answer to your hypothesis supported by your experiment and data from previous experiment's about the same idea
Yes, that is possible. It's to be expected.
It is certainly possible. The conclusion from your experiment may prove to be tentative and you may need to design a better experiment to improve the reliability of the conclusion, or the experiment may suggest alternatives which you may wish to explore. Most of science is about that: an experiment leads to conclusions. Further experiments result in refinements to the conclusions and, occasionally, to the replacement of earlier theories with new models.
the variables and the facts so you don't make any mistakes about the conclusion.
(A) What you did in your experiments? (B) What was your plan? (C) How you did your experiment? All of these are the conclusion that you can use. Well actually you have to use all of these. To figure and what you will have to write in your experiment for your conclusion.
An answer to your hypothesis supported by your experiment and data from previous experiment's about the same idea
Yes, that is possible. It's to be expected.
It is certainly possible. The conclusion from your experiment may prove to be tentative and you may need to design a better experiment to improve the reliability of the conclusion, or the experiment may suggest alternatives which you may wish to explore. Most of science is about that: an experiment leads to conclusions. Further experiments result in refinements to the conclusions and, occasionally, to the replacement of earlier theories with new models.
.Form a hypothesis do a experiment think about the results Form a conclusion
It's usually a statement that shows that your aim of the experiment has been achieved and that you have justified a fact. This justified fact is the conclusion. For example; if the aim of your experiment is 'To study whether plants need sunlight to sustain life', your conclusion would most likely, and by in fact, be 'Plants need sunlight to sustain life.'
It's usually a statement that shows that your aim of the experiment has been achieved and that you have justified a fact. This justified fact is the conclusion. For example; if the aim of your experiment is 'To study whether plants need sunlight to sustain life', your conclusion would most likely, and by in fact, be 'Plants need sunlight to sustain life.'
redo or retest the experiment
The conclusion is the goal of performing the experiment, without it the written results of the experiment would only be a "jumble of data". Other scientists need the conclusion both to validate the experimenter's reasoning and to decide on future experimental directions to take.
no where
They need to keep a record of each step, then start the experiment over and try not to make the mistake again or make changes in what they did to see what outcome they get.