How Does Introduction to Scientific Inquiry Work?

Imagine you're playing detective and trying to solve a mystery, that’s scientific inquiry!

You start by asking questions, like “Why is this cookie melting?” or “What happens if I jump higher than my brother?” Then, you make guesses, or hypotheses, about what might be happening. Maybe you think the cookie is melting because it's too close to the oven, just like how your face gets warm when you get near a fire.

Next, you test your guess by doing an experiment, like moving the cookie farther from the oven and seeing if it still melts. That’s testing! You watch what happens closely, almost like playing a game of “I Spy” with science.

If your cookie stops melting, you might say, “Hey, my guess was right!” If not, you try again, maybe the real reason is that the oven is too hot, or the cookie has chocolate on it. That’s learning and thinking like a scientist, just like how you learn new games by trying them out.

Sometimes you even make a rule about what always happens, like “If I put a cookie near the oven, it melts.” That’s how scientists figure things out every day! Imagine you're playing detective and trying to solve a mystery, that’s scientific inquiry!

You start by asking questions, like “Why is this cookie melting?” or “What happens if I jump higher than my brother?” Then, you make guesses, or hypotheses, about what might be happening. Maybe you think the cookie is melting because it's too close to the oven, just like how your face gets warm when you get near a fire.

Next, you test your guess by doing an experiment, like moving the cookie farther from the oven and seeing if it still melts. That’s testing! You watch what happens closely, almost like playing a game of “I Spy” with science.

If your cookie stops melting, you might say, “Hey, my guess was right!” If not, you try again, maybe the real reason is that the oven is too hot, or the cookie has chocolate on it. That’s learning and thinking like a scientist, just like how you learn new games by trying them out.

Sometimes you even make a rule about what always happens, like “If I put a cookie near the oven, it melts.” That’s how scientists figure things out every day!

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Examples

  1. A child wonders why the sky is blue and tests it with a magnifying glass.
  2. Someone tries to figure out if plants grow better with music by playing songs near them.
  3. A student checks if drinking water before bed helps them sleep more.

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