Invariably, they arise out of a curious mind. People make observations and notice what might be subtle patterns in the information, or they think about a problem in one field by playing with ideas from another field, or a thought comes after struggling with a problem for a long time. They can arise in any number of ways; but they all have curious minds as their means of expression.
General educated guesses from evidence and data. Then from that you make predictions and then test them. After enough data and evidence supporting the hypothesis is collected, it becomes a theory.
A hypothesis may be generated from the results of a previous study. It may also come from observation of the world and a question about that observation. Finally, a hypothesis may be generated by a public health or policy question being posed to a research team.
prior knowlege, logical inference and creative imagination
Information gathered from observing a plant grow 3 cm over a two-week period results in what?
Three possible ways a hypothesis may arise are:
I don't know the computer doesn't have everything!
Precious published papers
Observations of the natural world
Data/measurements from planned experiments
To be of any use to science, a hypothesis must be able to be tested. For instance, I might have a hypothesis that there is a civilization of giant butterfly people living in another galaxy. If I have no way to test this idea, then it really isn't a hypothesis. It would just be a wild guess.
his theory was that one day monkeys will one day run the near by mCdonalds
Ask a question Do background research Conduct a hypothesis Test your hypothesis by doing an experiment Analyze your data and draw a conclusion Communicate your result
Scientific inquiry begins with safety.
1. Thesis- "The purpose of this invertigation was.." 2. Hypothesis- "I thought that…If…Then…because…" 3. Answer the TQ- "I found out that… 4. Answer hypothesis- "My data does/does not support my hypothesis because…" 5. Observations- "My data showed that…" 6. Explain Results- "I got my results because…" "The reason _ happened was…" and "I think _ happened because…" 7. Errors- "I think _ could have affected my results because…" 8. Future- "In the future, I would like to…"
Three ways a hypothesis may arise are: 1.) Prior knowledge 2.) Logical inference 3.) Informed, creative imagination
1. Prior knowledge 2. Logical inference 3. Informed, creative imagination
1, The hypothesis may have to be revised. 2. The method of accumulating data may be flawed 3. The data may have been contaminated by other sources.
May 3, 1933James Brown was born on May 3, 1933 but some sources say that he was born June 17th 1928
1. Understand the Problem 2. Collect Information 3. Form a Hypothesis 4. Test Hypothesis 5. Keep Accurate Record 6. Check Results 7. Repeat Experiment 8. Confirm Conclusion 9. Communicate Results 10. List New Problems that Arise
It can be proven, you have to do at least 3 experiments to prove your hypothesis.
a hypothesis is only useful if u have something to test it on. : ) <3
There are 3 vowels in "hypothesis" (4 if you count the 'y').
ewan
1.prior knowledge 2.logicl inference 3.informed, creative imagination :) tamera M
nanay moh
the 3 kinds of hypothesis are: 1. alternative: this is the hypothesis that is affirmative, positive, and approving..... this gives a positive possible result of the experiment. 2. null: this is a negative hypothesis about the experiment........ 3. cause and effect: this kind of hypothesis gives a cause and effect hypothesis.... this has the "if & then" clause...... (example: "if sunlight affects the growth of plants, then it might slow down or fasten the plant's growth.")