Yup, a manipulative variable is the variable a scientist deliberately changes. This is also called an independent variable.
The independent variable is the variable you change. The dependent is the variable you measure and the contol variable is the variable that you keep the same.
Independent Variable
Independent variable, is variable that the experimenter manipulates
The independent variable. Any variable that is kept the same is a constant variable (although it is a contradiction in terms); any variable - usually only one - that depends on the independent variable is a dependent variable.
yes. AKA the independent variable
My manipulated variable was affected by the independent variable.
A manipulative variable is something that you will keep the same.
manipulative
The Independent/Manipulative variable is the variable that you purposely change, and the Dependent/Responsive variable is the variable that changes as a rest of the Independent variable. You measure the dependent variable to see the effects of the Independent variable.
A manipulated variable is also called an independent variable. It is the thing in an experiment you change or manipulate. For example, if i am doing an experiment to see how water affects the growth on plants, the amount of water is the manipulated variable.
The manipulative variable.
The independent variable is the variable you change. The dependent is the variable you measure and the contol variable is the variable that you keep the same.
No, the independent variable and the control variable cannot be the same. The independent variable is what is being changed or manipulated in an experiment to observe its effect on the dependent variable, while the control variable is kept constant to minimize its impact on the results. Having them be the same would defeat the purpose of having a control variable.
No, an independent variable is the variable that is manipulated or changed in an experiment to observe its effect on the dependent variable. It is not the variable that stays the same; that would be considered a constant in an experiment.
The independent variable
No. They can not.
The independent variable is the variable that the scientist controls and can change in an experiment. There should be only one independent variable in an experiment; otherwise the cause-and-effect of the independent variable cannot be determined.The dependent variable is the variable that is affected by the independent variable.EXAMPLE:Students of the same age have been given different sleeping hours (the independent variable)The next day they are tested for their performance (the dependent variable).(Having students the same age is a third type of variable, called the constant variable or the control variable. It is deliberately kept the same to reduce any effects on the outcome.)