False- The hypothesis is your prediction of what you expect to happen. If the data does not agree with your hypothesis you simply explain why your hypothesis did not come true and possibly investigate variable which would allow your hypothesis to come true.
That depends on the result of the experiment. The experiment is a way to test a hypothesis, and it's completely fine if the experiment disproves the hypothesis. Ideally, though, the experiment will support the hypothesis.
The experiment that you will design is done to test the hypothesis.
An experiment is performed to generate more data. If the data proves to not support the hypothesis the experiment was still useful. You could reproduce your experiment to see if it is performing the way it should. After you have confirmed the experiment is performing correctly you then could devise another experiment to further test your hypothesis or accept the result and revise your hypothesis.
If the data from an investigation does not support the original hypothesis then either:The method of investigation may be flawed and may need to be changed and repeated.The interpretation of the data may be incorrect and should be reviewed.The hypothesis needs to be reevaluated to possibly conform to the data.
Any experiment should start with a hypothesis.
That depends on the result of the experiment. The experiment is a way to test a hypothesis, and it's completely fine if the experiment disproves the hypothesis. Ideally, though, the experiment will support the hypothesis.
They should try again. Then check very carefully and see if they did the experiment correctly. They may have to change their hypothesis.
The experiment that you will design is done to test the hypothesis.
False- The hypothesis is your prediction of what you expect to happen. If the data does not agree with your hypothesis you simply explain why your hypothesis did not come true and possibly investigate variable which would allow your hypothesis to come true.
No. It just means that what you hypothesized would happen didn't. You shouldn't change anything. A hypothesis is simply a guess on what will happen, so if your guess isn't true that's okay.
When the evidence in a scientific experiment does not support the hypothesis the scientist:Confirm through repeated experimentation that the evidence is validReject the hypothesisDevelop another hypothesis that is consistent with the valid evidence
An experiment is performed to generate more data. If the data proves to not support the hypothesis the experiment was still useful. You could reproduce your experiment to see if it is performing the way it should. After you have confirmed the experiment is performing correctly you then could devise another experiment to further test your hypothesis or accept the result and revise your hypothesis.
draw up a new hypothesis based on your research
If the data from an investigation does not support the original hypothesis then either:The method of investigation may be flawed and may need to be changed and repeated.The interpretation of the data may be incorrect and should be reviewed.The hypothesis needs to be reevaluated to possibly conform to the data.
Any experiment should start with a hypothesis.
Hypothesis is examined very closely to see what it predicts, and the predictions are then rigorously tested. If the predictions are not supported by the results of experiments, the hypothesis is rejected but if they are confirmed, the hypothesis is supported.
Formulate a new hypothesis, taking into account the data from your experiment.