Beak of the Finch Worksheet – Due Monday
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Beak of the Finch Worksheet – Due Monday
Lab: Types of Reactions
Remember to complete your flipbooks to hand in tomorrow!!
Income Chapter Review – Feb 14
Time Card Assignment (hand in) – Feb 15
Lab: Modeling Darwin’s Finch Beaks Due Monday
Flow Chart – Create a flow chart that summarized the naming rules for ionic and covalent compounds. You may use this chart during the naming quiz on Tuesday February 20.
Assignment – Counting Atoms worksheet
Quiz tomorrow – Mitosis and asexual reproduction
Assignment: Mitosis Worksheet (pg 1,3 pg 2) – We will go over the answers before the quiz tomorrow
Lab reports may have varied criteria. Each experiment (and teacher) may require different sections to be included. Regardless of variations, however, the goal of lab reports remains the same: document your findings and communicate their significance.
A good lab report does more than present data; it demonstrates the writer’s comprehension of the concepts behind the data. Merely recording the expected and observed results is not sufficient; you should also identify how and why differences occurred, explain how they affected your experiment, and show your understanding of the principles the experiment was designed to examine.
Style, Format and Mechanics
For example:
Preferred – The results indicated that solution A had a higher concentration than solution B
Avoid – In this lab I learned that solution A had a higher concentration than solution B
Introduction (Purpose, Background, Hypothesis)
Review the criteria to determine is a full introduction is needed. Some reports only require purpose or hypothesis.
Materials
Write a complete and accurate list of equipment and chemicals. Indicate how much of each material will be used in the experiment. Sketches or photographs of complex setups may also be included.
Procedure
Results/Observations/Data
Conclusion/Discussion
This section summarizes your purpose, explains the reasoning of your procedure and provides a scientific explanation of your results. It requires thinking critically about the findings and examining the relationship of the results to other experiments. Parts of the conclusion repeat other elements of your report. This is OK. A reader should be able to understand the entire experiment by reading only the conclusion.
References