Difference between revisions of "Hypothesis"
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Revision as of 14:39, 13 December 2019
Contents
Key Stage 3
Meaning
A hypothesis is an attempt to describe or explain something before an experiment has been performed.
About Hypotheses
- A hypothesis is made after an observation. The hypothesis is an attempt to explain what has been observed or describe a set of rules that the observation follows (eg the bigger an object is, the heavier it is).
- A hypothesis is used to design an experiment. A good experiment is designed to find a way to prove the hypothesis is wrong. That way it can reduce the effects of bias. If you set out to prove a hypothesis is correct it is too easy to cheat. If your hypothesis was that you're the tallest person in school it would be easy to walk into a classroom full of younger children and say "after testing 25 people I was the tallest". However, if you tried to prove yourself wrong you would walk into a classroom full of the oldest students in school. That way, if you were the tallest in that group, it would be more likely to be true that you are the tallest in school.
Key Stage 4
Meaning
A hypothesis is an attempt to describe or explain something before an experiment has been performed.
About Hypotheses
- A hypothesis is made after an observation. The hypothesis is an attempt to explain what has been observed or describe a set of rules that the observation follows (eg the bigger an object is, the heavier it is).
- A hypothesis is used to design an experiment. A good experiment is designed to find a way to prove the hypothesis is wrong. That way it can reduce the effects of bias. If you set out to prove a hypothesis is correct it is too easy to cheat. If your hypothesis was that you're the tallest person in school it would be easy to walk into a classroom full of younger children and say "after testing 25 people I was the tallest". However, if you tried to prove yourself wrong you would walk into a classroom full of the oldest students in school. That way, if you were the tallest in that group, it would be more likely to be true that you are the tallest in school.
References
Edexcel
- Hypotheses, page 2, GCSE Chemistry; The Revision Guide, CGP, Edexcel
- Hypotheses, pages 1, 4, GCSE Combined Science; The Revision Guide, CGP, Edexcel
- Hypotheses, pages 2, 3, GCSE Chemistry, CGP, Edexcel
- Hypotheses, pages 2, 3, GCSE Physics, CGP, Edexcel
- Hypotheses, pages 2, 5, GCSE Biology; The Revision Guide, CGP, Edexcel
- Hypotheses, pages 2, 9, GCSE Biology, CGP, Edexcel
OCR
- Hypotheses, page 2, Gateway GCSE Chemistry; The Revision Guide, CGP, OCR
- Hypotheses, pages 1, 4, Gateway GCSE Combined Science; The Revision Guide, CGP, OCR
- Hypotheses, pages 2, 5, Gateway GCSE Biology; The Revision Guide, CGP, OCR
- Hypotheses, pages 2, 5, Gateway GCSE Physics; The Revision Guide, CGP, OCR
- Hypotheses, pages 6-7, Gateway GCSE Biology, Oxford, OCR
- Hypotheses, pages 6-7, Gateway GCSE Physics, Oxford, OCR