crammy90
Member
- Joined
- Mar 26, 2006
- Messages
- 264
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2008
experiment: place a raw chicken bone in a sample of each of acid, water, fire; to remove calcium to test the flexibility of bones after these conditions have taken affect on the raw bones.
Accuracy: as it is not quantitative is there no accuracy to this?
or would it be measuring the exact volume for solutions, measuring their exact conc etc.
reliability: if i say my whole class did it and got the same results (acid made bone flexible, burning brittle and water nothing) is that reliable? or does reliable mean like 1000's of tests and what not?
validity: so i have developed the perception this involves considering your experimental method to determine if what you have done has given you the outcome you are wishing to find (i.e. is your experimental design going to give you a value that answers your aim). Also involves ensuring you only change the independant variable (solution) so the dependant(flexibility)'s results can be a pure reflection of the variable changed.
for this experiment would validity be: our experiment was valid as it shows how the nature of a solution affects the bones flexibility. Only one variable was changed, the rest kept constant so it is again enforced to be valid as the method used gives us a reflection of how these conditions affects flexibility.
(would it be right to say it wasnt done in STP so not entirely reliably)
and would
a) going this but with different concentrations of the solution increase reliablity (reliability) or validity (experimental design).
b) the fact the results were recorded in a subjective manner affect accuracy or reliability
thanks for any1 that answers
Accuracy: as it is not quantitative is there no accuracy to this?
or would it be measuring the exact volume for solutions, measuring their exact conc etc.
reliability: if i say my whole class did it and got the same results (acid made bone flexible, burning brittle and water nothing) is that reliable? or does reliable mean like 1000's of tests and what not?
validity: so i have developed the perception this involves considering your experimental method to determine if what you have done has given you the outcome you are wishing to find (i.e. is your experimental design going to give you a value that answers your aim). Also involves ensuring you only change the independant variable (solution) so the dependant(flexibility)'s results can be a pure reflection of the variable changed.
for this experiment would validity be: our experiment was valid as it shows how the nature of a solution affects the bones flexibility. Only one variable was changed, the rest kept constant so it is again enforced to be valid as the method used gives us a reflection of how these conditions affects flexibility.
(would it be right to say it wasnt done in STP so not entirely reliably)
and would
a) going this but with different concentrations of the solution increase reliablity (reliability) or validity (experimental design).
b) the fact the results were recorded in a subjective manner affect accuracy or reliability
thanks for any1 that answers