Name: ______Date: ______Period: ______Pride: ______

HOW TO WRITE A HYPOTHESIS

A hypothesis is a tentative statement that proposes a possible explanation to some phenomenon or event. A useful hypothesis is a testable statement, which may include a prediction. A hypotheses should not be confused with a theory. Theories are general explanations based on a large amount of data. For example, the theory of evolution applies to all living things and is based on wide range of observations. However, there are many things about evolution that are not fully understood such as gaps in the fossil record. Many hypotheses have been proposed and tested.

When Are Hypotheses Used?

The key word is testable. That is, you will perform a test of how two variables might be related. This is when you are doing a real experiment. You are testing variables. Usually, a hypothesis is based on some previous observation such as noticing that in November many trees undergo color changes in their leaves and the average daily temperatures are dropping. Are these two events connected? How? Any laboratory procedure you follow without a hypothesis is really not an experiment. It is just an exercise or demonstration of what is already known.

How Are Hypotheses Written? Example: If the drop height of the raw egg increases, then the chance it will break will increase because it will have an increased final velocity as it hits the ground.

Notice that this statements contains the words if, then, and because. They are necessary in a formalized hypothesis. But not all if-then-because statements are hypotheses. For example, "If I play the lottery, then I will get rich because I think I will win." This is a simple prediction. In a formalized hypothesis, a relationship is stated.

Formalized hypotheses contain two variables. One is "manipulated" and the other is "responding." The manipulated variable is the one you, the "scientist" control and the responding variable is the one that you observe and/or measure the results. In the example above, the variable that comes after the “if” is the manipulated variable, and the variable that comes after the “then” is the responding variable. Be sure to explain why you chose your hypothesis by completing the sentence with “because…”

The ultimate value of a formalized hypothesis is it forces us to think about what results we should look for in an experiment. Complete the “Writing Hypotheses Practice Sheet” to try out a few hypotheses.

PRACTICE WRITING HYPOTHESES

Directions:

Write Hypotheses for the given situations in the space provided. Identify the dependent and independent variable for each.

1.  How does the amount of leaves on a tree affect how many birds will build nests in it?

Hypothesis: If ______,

then ______

because ______.

2.  How does the acid level of a lake affect how many fish live there?

Hypothesis: If ______,

then ______

because ______.

3.  How does the amount of milk you drink affect the strength of your bones?

Hypothesis: If ______,

then ______

because ______.

4. Manipulated Variable: Length of paper helicopter blades

Responding Variable: Rotational speed

The student believes that as the blades get longer, the amount of distance they need to travel increases, so it will take them longer to travel that distance.

Hypothesis: ______

5. Manipulated Variable: Temperature of a solution

Responding Variable: Dissolving time of powdered drink mix

The students thinks that powdered mix will dissolve faster in a warmer solution because there of the higher average kinetic energy in warm water.

Hypothesis: ______

6. Manipulated Variable: Depth of Lake Elkhorn

Responding Variable: Water temperature

The students research says that the deepest trenches in the ocean are filled with the coldest water, so the colder a lake, the deeper it must be.

Hypothesis: ______

7. Manipulated Variable: Baseball batting practice

Responding Variable: Batting average

The student did observation (went to MLB batting practice) and found that Dustin Pedroia does batting practice for 1 hour before a game while Derek Jeter does it for 45 minutes.

Hypothesis: ______

8. Manipulated Variable: Number of recycling posters in school building

Responding Variable: Amount of aluminum cans found on school grounds

Hypothesis: ______