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5 votes
PLEASE ANWSER THESE QUESTIONS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

PLEASE DONT JUST ANWSER FOR POINTS!!!!!!!!!!!


Directions
Now that the lab is complete, it is time to write your lab report. The purpose of this guide is to help you write a clear and concise report that summarizes the lab you have just completed.
The lab report is composed of three sections:
Section I: Experimental Overview
o Provide background information.
o Include the hypothesis.
o Summarize the procedure.

Section II: Data and Analysis
o Include graphs to display trends in the data.
o Identify trends in the data.

Section III: Conclusions
o Identify if the hypothesis was supported or refuted.
o Provide logical reasoning based on data.
o Explain how the experiment could be improved.

To help you write your lab report, you will first answer the eight questions listed below based on the experiment that you have just completed. Then you will use the answers to these questions to write the lab report that you will turn in to your teacher.
You can upload your completed report with the upload tool in formats such as OpenOffice.org, Microsoft Word, or PDF. Alternatively, your teacher may ask you to turn in a paper copy of your report or use a web-based writing tool.
Questions

Section I: Experimental Overview
1. What is the purpose of the lab?












2. What is your hypothesis for this experiment?
















3. What methods are you using to test this hypothesis?
Outline the steps of the procedure in full sentences.











Section II: Data and Analysis
4. What graphs would clearly represent the trends in your data?
Your Student Guide includes information on which graphs to construct. Each graph should have the following items:
a. An appropriate title
b. Appropriate labels for each axis
c. An appropriate scale for each axis
d. The correct units for the data

Complete a rough sketch of each graph.
































5. What do the data in your graphs tell you?
Explain in one or two sentences what trend is shown in each of your graphs.





Section III: Conclusions
6. What do the data tell you about your hypothesis?
State how your hypothesis is either supported OR refuted by the data.









7. How do the data support your claim above?
Explain your statement above. Be sure to refer to specific pieces of data from your experiment that support your argument.












8. If you could repeat the experiment and make it better, what would you do differently and why?
There are always ways that experiments can be improved. Now that you are a veteran of this experiment and have experience with the procedure, offer some advice to the next scientist about what you suggest and why.

2 Answers

4 votes
The total answer is user C.E.R
User Friedbunny
by
6.8k points
3 votes

Answer:

Use C.E.R.

Step-by-step explanation:

My science teacher always makes us use C.E.R.

C-Claim

Provide a statement that you learn during the experiment

E-Evidence

Provide evidence to prove your claim

(I like to give about three pieces of evidence.)

R-Reasoning

Provide a concluding statement or thesis

(I usually start with: This shows that...)

User Dinesh Nagarajan
by
7.6k points