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Experimental design

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visibility 68update 8 months agobookmarkshare

In this topic you will

  • Understand what it means to design a scientific experiment and why careful planning is important.
  • Learn how to form a testable hypothesis and make predictions.
  • Know how to identify variables (independent, dependent, controlled) and ensure a fair test.
  • Learn to plan the procedure for an experiment, including selecting equipment, making measurements, and considering safety.
 

Keywords

  • Hypothesis
  • Prediction
  • Independent Variable
  • Dependent Variable
  • Controlled Variables
  • Fair Test
  • Reliability
  • Trial 
  • Hazard
 

What is Experimental Design?

Experimental design is the process of planning how to test a scientific idea or question in a systematic and fair way. It means figuring out how to change one factor at a time while keeping everything else the same, so you can measure the effect and draw a valid conclusion. A well-designed experiment allows you to gather evidence to support or refute a hypothesis.

Good experimental design is important because if an experiment is poorly planned, the results may be unreliable or meaningless. Scientists follow the scientific method – making observations, asking questions, forming a hypothesis, then conducting experiments – to ensure their findings are trustworthy.

 

Quick Fact

Over 2000 years ago, Aristotle emphasized measurements to gain knowledge. Later, Galileo Galilei pioneered careful experiments — laying the foundation for modern science.

 

Starting with a Question and Hypothesis

Every experiment begins with a scientific question or problem. For example, you might wonder, "Does fertilizer help plants grow taller?" From a question, scientists propose a hypothesis – a possible explanation or answer that can be tested.

A hypothesis is an educated guess, often written as an if...then statement, such as: "If a plant is given fertilizer, then it will grow taller than a plant that isn’t given fertilizer." This makes it clear what to change and what to measure.

A prediction is what you expect to observe if the hypothesis is correct — for example: "Plants given fertilizer will grow taller over 4 weeks than plants given no fertilizer."

The hypothesis gives reasoning, and the prediction gives a measurable outcome. The hypothesis must be testable — if it can’t be tested by observation or experiment, it’s not scientific.

 

Common Mistake

Don’t confuse a hypothesis with a random guess. A good hypothesis is always based on prior knowledge, research, or observations — and must be testable through an investigation.

 

Planning a Fair Test: Variables and Controls

A fair test is an experiment where only one factor — the independent variable — is changed at a time, while everything else stays the same. This way, any result you measure can confidently be linked to what you changed.

Independent variable: the one thing you change on purpose (e.g., whether the plant gets fertilizer).

Dependent variable: the thing you measure (e.g., plant height).

Controlled variables: everything else that must stay the same (e.g., type of plant, sunlight, water).

If more than one thing changes, the test is not fair and you won’t know which factor caused the results.

 

Common Mistake

A common error is changing multiple variables at once or forgetting to control important factors like temperature or soil type. This leads to unreliable results.

 

Planning the Procedure and Materials

Once your hypothesis and variables are clear, it’s time to plan how to carry out the experiment. List all materials and tools needed (e.g., ruler, timer, thermometer). Choose measuring instruments that match your needs in accuracy and units.

Write your steps like a recipe. Be specific: what will you change, what will you measure, how often, and for how long? Also decide how many times you will repeat the test — repeating increases reliability.

Use a table to record your data and think ahead about how you’ll display it (e.g., graphs of growth over time).

 

Quick Tip

Doing a preliminary trial can help you test your method before the real experiment. This helps avoid mistakes and improves your plan.

 

Safety and Ethical Considerations

Every experiment must be safe and ethical. Think ahead: could anything be dangerous? Are chemicals involved? Will you be heating things? Plan how to avoid harm by wearing goggles, tying back hair, and following all lab rules.

If people or animals are involved, you must have their permission and treat them respectfully. Being ethical means not causing unnecessary pain or distress.

 

Alert

Always check for potential hazards before beginning any experiment. Use safety equipment and follow teacher instructions closely.

 

Think Like a Scientist

Design and carry out your own experiment to test a hypothesis about plant growth.

Your Investigation:

  1. Write a hypothesis: What do you think will happen if a plant is given different amounts of light?
  2. Choose your independent variable (e.g. amount of light: full sun, partial sun, darkness).
  3. Decide your dependent variable (e.g. height of the plant after 10 days).
  4. Keep all other variables the same (e.g. water, soil type, plant type).
  5. Plan your method and materials (how many plants, how long the test lasts, when you measure).
  6. Record your data in a table and write a conclusion: did the results support your hypothesis?

Now reflect:

1. What was your hypothesis, and was it supported by the results?
Show Answer

Sample hypothesis: "If a plant gets less sunlight, it will grow more slowly." Yes, the results showed less growth in the dark group, which supports the hypothesis.

2. What variables did you control, and why was that important?
Show Answer

Controlled variables: type of plant, pot size, water, soil. Keeping them the same ensured that only light affected the result.

3. What could you do to improve this experiment?
Show Answer

Repeat the experiment with more plants and run it for a longer time to make your results more reliable.

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