If you are writing a practical report it can be very small! Often the aim is, simply stated, the hypothesis you are trying to test.
An experiment should be designed to answer a specific question.
when you are doing n experiment in science you need to state your aim, the point youa re trying to prove with a question.
Goal/Aim- What are you aiming for?Hypothesis- The possible answer that you are trying to approve or disapprove.Equipment- Materials needed to do the experimentProcedure- The process of the experimentResults- The outcome of the experiment/what happened/was your hypothesis correct?Conclusion- Your concluding sentence
On a typical science fair posterboard, you should have the following headings: Introduction- introduce your topic, how this topic affects the world, etc. Problem - the aim of the experiment Hypothesis - educated guess on the outcome Materials - materials used in the experiment Procedure - list each step in your experiment in chronological order (Pictures) - you really don't have to have a heading for this Graphs - you should probably head this one Results - results of the experiment Conclusion - your conclusions. include applications of your results here. Also, it would be a good idea to have a small note on the corner of your board stating that all pictures were taken by the experimenter.
Your hypothesis is like a good guess or prediction of what you expect to find from carrying out your experiment - in other words, it is like an answer to your aim.
An experiment should be designed to answer a specific question.
when you are doing n experiment in science you need to state your aim, the point youa re trying to prove with a question.
It is the "aim"
Goal/Aim- What are you aiming for?Hypothesis- The possible answer that you are trying to approve or disapprove.Equipment- Materials needed to do the experimentProcedure- The process of the experimentResults- The outcome of the experiment/what happened/was your hypothesis correct?Conclusion- Your concluding sentence
The aim
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.'
On a typical science fair posterboard, you should have the following headings: Introduction- introduce your topic, how this topic affects the world, etc. Problem - the aim of the experiment Hypothesis - educated guess on the outcome Materials - materials used in the experiment Procedure - list each step in your experiment in chronological order (Pictures) - you really don't have to have a heading for this Graphs - you should probably head this one Results - results of the experiment Conclusion - your conclusions. include applications of your results here. Also, it would be a good idea to have a small note on the corner of your board stating that all pictures were taken by the experimenter.
Type your answer here... Hypothesis is your guess/prediction to the results of an experiment and also in relation to the aim of the experiment.
Type your answer here... Hypothesis is your guess/prediction to the results of an experiment and also in relation to the aim of the experiment.
Aim of an experiment to show that starch is produced in the presence of sunlight
The aim is the goal of the experiment, for example, you may be turning milk into plastic. So the aim is to turn milk into plastic. The hypothesis is what you THINK will happen. So you might think that the milk will turn into a substance quite unlike plastic. So the aim can be quite different to a hypothesis, or very similar!
Your hypothesis is like a good guess or prediction of what you expect to find from carrying out your experiment - in other words, it is like an answer to your aim.