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Variables, Control Groups, Experimental Groups Review
Presentation
•
Science
•
6th - 8th Grade
•
Medium
+10
Standards-aligned
Derek Atlas
Used 21+ times
FREE Resource
26 Slides • 20 Questions
1
Variables, Constants, Control Groups, Experimental Groups
What are they?
2
Multiple Choice
Quick Review: An independent variable in an experiment is the thing we...
Measure
Change
Keep the Same
Build
3
I.V. = The temperature outside
This is the ONLY thing I can change in my experiment!!!
4
Multiple Choice
A dependent variable is the thing we...
Measure
Change
Keep the Same
Observe
5
Let’s Start with Constants
Controlled S.M. experiments = cause & effect
How does [independent variable] affect [dependent variable]?
In a controlled experiment, we can only ever change one thing at a time. This is our independent or manipulated variable
Ex: How does sunlight affect plant growth?
I can ONLY change the amount of sun each plant gets and NOTHING else, or my experiment isn’t valid!
6
Constants
Because we can only change one thing, every other part of our experiment must be kept the same.
Constants = the things we keep the same in an experiment so that we only change ONE thing [I.V.]
7
Multiple Choice
How many things can we change in an experiment?
None
Two
One
Three
As many as we want
8
Without constants, we get error!
Was it the independent variable or something else that caused the outcome of our experiment?
If we allow more than one thing to be changed, we’ll never know!
Error = something besides our I.V. affecting our experiment results
9
Example of Constants
My testable science question:
Does the temperature outside affect how high my kite will fly?
10
Multiple Choice
What's the independent variable: Does the temperature outside affect how high my kite will fly?
The kite
How high the kite will fly
The temperature outside
The wind speed
11
Multiple Choice
What's the dependent variable: Does the temperature outside affect how high my kite will fly?
The kite
How high the kite will fly
The temperature outside
The wind speed
12
As a control-freak scientist, I have to ask myself: what else besides the independent variable could affect my dependent variable, even accidentally?
13
These are constants, or things we need to keep the same during our experiment.
We can ONLY change the temperature outside, so wind speeds, geographic location (where I’m standing), which kite I use, what time of day it is, the humidity/ moisture in the air, birds running into my kite, whether other people are also flying kites, etc. all need to STAY THE SAME!!!
14
Multiple Select
If we don't pay attention to constants in our experiment, what could happen? Check all that apply.
We could have error
More than one thing could affect the dependent variable
We won't know if our results are truly based on the independent variable or something else
Our results will be inaccurate
Nothing will happen
15
Multiple Choice
Which brand of gum, Hubba Bubba or Double Bubble, results in bigger bubbles blown? What's our dependent variable?
Brand of gum
Color of gum
Size of bubble blown
Time we chew the gum for
16
Control & Experimental Groups
17
Control & Experimental Groups
When we design a controlled experiment, we want to see how one independent variable affects a dependent variable.
(How does the air temperature affect how fast ice melts?)
18
We only want to measure one IV, so we brainstorm all the constants that could affect our experiment (even accidentally).
Location of ice, surface the ice is sitting on/ in, size of the ice, airflow in the room, temperature of the container when we put the ice in, the timer we use, the person doing the timing, the thermometer we use, the person holding/ reading the thermometer, etc.
19
To make sure we didn’t miss anything, though, we will use a control group.
20
Experimental Group
An experimental group is whatever you’re experimenting on; gets the I.V.
In our ice example, the ice that we’re exposing to different air temperatures
21
Control Group
A control group is another group of whatever you’re experimenting on, and is identical to the experimental group EXCEPT: you do NOT change the independent variable!
The control group gets all the same constants as the experimental group
Constants in our ice example, same container, same airflow, same room, timer, thermometer, etc.
22
Multiple Select
What are the two groups in a controlled experiment called?
Control Group
Change Group
Experimental Group
Observe Group
23
Multiple Choice
The group that does receive the independent variable change is the
Control Group
Experimental Group
24
Multiple Choice
What do the experimental and control groups in an experiment NOT have in common?
They use the same materials
The dependent variable (what we're measuring) is the same for both groups
The independent variable (what we're changing) is the same for both groups
The constants (except the I.V.) are the same for both groups
We collect the same data for both groups
25
Experimental Group
Gets the independent variable (I change the amount of water) and all the constants
26
Control Group
Gets all the constants PLUS the I.V. becomes a constant (each plant gets the same amount of water)
27
My Experimental Design
28
My CG should have the same results as WHICH plant in my EG?
29
Multiple Choice
My control group plants should show the same results as which plant in my experimental group?
Plant 1
Plant 2
Plant 3
30
My Experiment Results
31
CG as expected; data looks accurate!
32
Something is wrong... CG inconsistent!
33
Constants
Controlled Experiments = How does [independent variable] affect [dependent variable]?
We only change ONE thing in a controlled experiment - only ONE independent variable
Constants are all the things/ conditions we keep the same in an experiment so the ONE I.V. is the only thing that’s changed
34
Control Groups
2 groups in an experiment: experimental group & control group
The experimental group IS manipulated/ gets the independent variable
Control groups get all the same constants as the experimental group, PLUS they DON’T get the I.V. or the I.V. becomes a constant.
35
Multiple Choice
A plant receives the same amount of sunlight and water at the same time each day. What is the constant?
different amount of sunlight
different plant
same amount of sunlight, water and same time
36
Multiple Choice
Jerry believed that fertilizer will make the plant grow faster, so he treated one plant with fertilizer and the other plant did not receive fertilizer. What is the experimental group?
plant receiving fertilizer
plant not receiving fertilizer
plant receiving water because it needs water to grow
37
Control Group
Does not receive the treatment or test material
For example: One plant does not receive fertilizer
Not receiving the fertilizer makes this plant the control group
38
Multiple Choice
Michael believed that fertilizer will make the plant grow faster, so he treated one plant with fertilizer and the other plant did not receive fertilizer. What is the control group?
plant receiving fertilizer
plant not receiving fertilizer
Michael believing the plant will grow faster
39
Multiple Choice
A test is set up to test which brand of soda creates the biggest foam explosion when adding a Mentos candy. Three different sodas were tested. They measured the height of the foam eruption. What is a controlled variable (constant) for this experiment?
All are controlled variables (constants)
40
In an experiment, the group that is being treated by the independent variable is the experimental group.
The control group is the one allows for comparisons.
Experimental vs. Control Groups
41
Multiple Choice
If I study for my scientific method test, then I will have a better test score. Who would be in the control group?
Everyone that studies and doesn't study
The students that study.
The students that don't study.
42
Multiple Choice
Research Question: Does using a higher quality of gasoline in a car effect how fast the car can drive. What is the experimental group in this experiment?
cars with regular unleaded gasoline
cars with higher quality gasoline
electric cars
gasoline-powered cars
43
Multiple Choice
44
Multiple Choice
45
Multiple Choice
46
Most people mix these up because...
They sound the same
They both have to do with experiments
They are closely related, but not identical
Scientists insist on calling constants “controlled variables” sometimes, which makes it even more confusing
Variables, Constants, Control Groups, Experimental Groups
What are they?
Show answer
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