What is scientific?

Scientific means using questions, tests, and answers to figure out how things work, just like when you try to solve a puzzle or find out why your favorite toy does what it does.

Like Solving a Mystery

Imagine you have a toy car that moves forward when you push it. One day, it stops moving. You might think, “Why isn’t my toy car going?” That’s the question.

Then you try pushing it harder, maybe it starts working again. Or maybe it needs more batteries. Those are your tests, like trying different answers to a riddle.

When you figure out that the car needed new batteries, that's the answer, and now you know how to make it go again next time!

Like Baking Cookies

Scientific thinking is also like baking cookies. If your cookie turns out too salty, you might think, “Did I use too much salt?” Then you try using less salt next time, that’s testing.

If the new batch tastes just right, you’ve found a good answer to your problem. And now you know how to make perfect cookies every time!

Scientific thinking is all about asking “why,” trying things out, and learning from what happens, like being a detective or a chef!

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Examples

  1. A child tests if a plant grows faster with music by playing different songs and measuring growth.
  2. Someone counts how many times they sneeze in a day to see if it's related to their coffee intake.
  3. A student drops two balls from the same height to see which hits the ground first.

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