How Does The Scientific Inquiry Process Work?

Scientific inquiry is like playing detective with your favorite toys, you ask questions and try to find answers through fun experiments.

Imagine you have a toy car that suddenly stops moving. You might wonder, “Why won’t my car go?” That’s the first step in scientific inquiry: asking a question.

Next, you come up with a guess or an idea, maybe you think the wheels are stuck. This is called a hypothesis. It's like saying, “I bet if I push the wheels, they’ll move again.”

Then you test your guess by trying different things, pushing the wheels, checking for blocks in the way. This is called an experiment.

If your car starts moving after you fix the wheels, that supports your idea. If not, you might try another guess, maybe the battery is low! That’s how scientists learn: they keep asking questions and trying new answers, just like you would with your toy car. Scientific inquiry is like playing detective with your favorite toys, you ask questions and try to find answers through fun experiments.

Imagine you have a toy car that suddenly stops moving. You might wonder, “Why won’t my car go?” That’s the first step in scientific inquiry: asking a question.

Next, you come up with a guess or an idea, maybe you think the wheels are stuck. This is called a hypothesis. It's like saying, “I bet if I push the wheels, they’ll move again.”

Then you test your guess by trying different things, pushing the wheels, checking for blocks in the way. This is called an experiment.

If your car starts moving after you fix the wheels, that supports your idea. If not, you might try another guess, maybe the battery is low! That’s how scientists learn: they keep asking questions and trying new answers, just like you would with your toy car.

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Examples

  1. A child notices that plants grow taller when given more water and sunlight, leading them to test their idea with different amounts of each.
  2. A student guesses that a heavier ball will roll faster down a ramp and tests it by rolling balls of different weights.
  3. A person thinks their coffee tastes better in the morning because they're more awake and decides to try drinking it at night.

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