Descriptive Labs SelfGuide

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InLab: the lab procedure

1. Setting up the lab:

Take notes as you set up your experiment and calibrate instruments to help you document your experimental protocol so that you may use it later when writing the Methods section of your lab report.

On a sheet of paper or in your lab manual or in a formal lab notebook, list the lab materials you'll be using and describe the set-up for this experiment. Take notes about potential sources of uncertainty so that you may refer to them when you are writing the Discussion section of your lab report. You may want to or may be required to draw and label the instrument(s) you'll be using.

(See below for definitions of underlined words.)

(Refer to the web version of this document for example lab notebook pages.)

Lab notebook:
Keeping accurate lab notebooks is very important for professional scientists and engineers. Their lab notebooks are permanent legal records of all work conducted in the laboratory. Because of their importance, professional lab notebooks should be:

  • Logs or journals of all the information collected during lab, including procedures and sketches of instruments or tools.
  • Written in ink with corrections initialed and noted.
  • Labeled with page numbers, time, date, and titles for all procedures, tables, charts, graphs, etc.

Sources of Uncertainty:
In science, a source of uncertainty is anything that occurs in the laboratory that could lead to uncertainty in your results. Sources of uncertainty can occur at any point in the lab, from setting up the lab to analyzing data, and they can vary from lab to lab. This is why it is so important to keep detailed notes of everything you do in the lab procedure and any problems you encounter. Try to be especially aware of any problems in setting up the lab, calibrating instruments, and taking measurements as well as problems with the materials you are using.

For advanced labs, you may want to classify the kinds of uncertainty you have identified. Sources of uncertainty can be classified as random-those that cannot be predicted-or as systematic-those that are related to personal uncertainty, procedural uncertainty, or instrumental uncertainty.

2. Preparing a table or spreadsheet for recording your data:

Using the information you have gathered about the data you will be collecting and list of variables from your PreLab as a guide, create a raw data table or set up a spreadsheet for entering data from your experiment. For help in determining which you should create now, a table or a spreadsheet, see below . For general information on tables, go to Designing Tables. (refer to the web version of this document to access these resources)

Creating a Table or a Spreadsheet:
A table provides a very convenient tool for organizing the data you collect in your lab. You can quickly draw a table on a sheet of paper, you can make one with a word processing program, or you can generate one with spreadsheet software. Using a hand-drawn table in the lab also allows you the flexibility of entering the data into a spreadsheet at a later time. The chief advantage to entering data in a spreadsheet is that you can easily convert it not only into a table but also into all sorts of graphs.

Use this guide to figure out whether or not you should use a table or a spreadsheet for recording your data in the lab:

  • If you do not have access to a computer with spreadsheet software in your lab, then you should create a table. You can use the data in the table to generate a spreadsheet later, if necessary.
  • If you know you will need to create graphs for your data and have access to spreadsheet software in the lab, then use the spreadsheet.
  • If you are not sure what form, table or graph, you will be using to report your findings and it is convenient to use a spreadsheet, then use a spreadsheet.
  • If creating a spreadsheet in the lab will take too much lab time, then use a table and create the spreadsheet later.

3. Conducting the experiment:

Conduct your experiment as set up in the PreLab and record your data in a table or spreadsheet (see question 2 above). Take detailed notes on your experimental procedures. These notes may be all you have later on when you write your lab report. It's also important to note any problems you have with the experiment; these notes could be useful when writing the Discussion. Describe in writing or sketch out on a sheet of paper your observations as you collect data during the experiment (observations are potentially significant things that are not reflected in the measurements: color, smell, interesting reactions, unexpected behaviors, etc.)

As you record your data, take note of any trends emerging in the data. You should be asking yourself various questions: What are the relationships among the variables? Do the data behave in the way that you had anticipated? If not, why not? You may need to consider sources of uncertainty once again. Sources of uncertainty may affect the accuracy and precision of your experimental data. (See below for definitions of underlined words.)

Note: If the results of your experiment do not seem to lead you to an answer to your research question, you may need to rethink the design of your experiment, which could mean revising the experiment, revising the variables, revising the hypothesis, or even revising the research question. A good scientist must be flexible in designing and conducting experiments. Remember that the most important part of an experiment is that it is clearly designed so that it may be repeated by others seeking to reach the same conclusions. Whether you are right or wrong with respect to your hypothesis is not as important as a well-designed experiment.

Relationships Among the Variables:
Since dependent variables "depend" on independent variables, there has to be a relationship between the two. The relationships between the dependent and independent variables are what is described in the hypothesis. So it's important to determine what those relationships are in order to see whether or not the hypothesis has been supported.

Sources of Uncertainty:
In science, a source of uncertainty is anything that occurs in the laboratory that could lead to uncertainty in your results. Sources of uncertainty can occur at any point in the lab, from setting up the lab to analyzing data, and they can vary from lab to lab. This is why it is so important to keep detailed notes of everything you do in the lab procedure and any problems you encounter. Try to be especially aware of any problems in setting up the lab, calibrating instruments, and taking measurements as well as problems with the materials you are using.

For advanced labs, you may want to classify the kinds of uncertainty you have identified. Sources of uncertainty can be classified as random-those that cannot be predicted-or as systematic-those that are related to personal uncertainty, procedural uncertainty, or instrumental uncertainty.


Accuracy and Precision:
Accuracy refers to the closeness of a measured value to a standard or known value. For example, if in lab you obtain a weight measurement of 3.2 kg for a given substance, but the actual or known weight is 10 kg, then your measurement is not accurate. In this case, your measurement is not close to the known value.

Precision refers to the closeness of two or more measurements to each other. Using the example above, if you weigh a given substance five times, and get 3.2 kg each time, then your measurement is very precise. Precision is independent of accuracy. You can be very precise but inaccurate, as described above. You can also be accurate but imprecise.

For example, if on average, your measurements for a given substance are close to the known value, but the measurements are far from each other, then you have accuracy without precision.

A good analogy for understanding accuracy and precision is to imagine a basketball player shooting baskets. If the player shoots with accuracy, his aim will always take the ball close to or into the basket. If the player shoots with precision, his aim will always take the ball to the same location which may or may not be close to the basket. A good player will be both accurate and precise by shooting the ball the same way each time and each time making it in the basket.

4. Visualizing the data:

Now that you have entered your data in a table or spreadsheet, you are ready to represent the data in the appropriate visual format for your lab report. Representing your data in a visual format will allow you to identify trends and relationships among variables more easily. Follow these steps:

  • Establish what types of data you have, quantitative or qualitative (refer to the Resources page in the web version of this document; once there, choose "Data Types").
  • Determine if the data should be represented as a table or a graph (refer to the Resources page in the web version of this document; once there, choose "Tables vs. Graphs").
  • If you decide to use a graph to represent your data, determine which type of graph is one that best represents your data (refer to the Resources page in the web version of this document; once there, choose "Graph Types").
  • If a table is the best format for your data, then modify the table you used to collect your data so that it is labeled and organized properly (refer to the Resources page in the web version of this document; once there, choose "Designing Tables").
  • If you need help creating a spreadsheet to make a table or graph, refer to the Resources page in the web version of this document. Once there, choose "Excel Tutorial".
  • Remember that the purpose of your table or graph is to summarize your findings for yourself and for others and to reveal trends in your data.

5. Using your data to solve your research problem:

Review all your data--tables, graphs, and drawings--to establish whether or not or to what degree the data support your hypothesis. Next, use what you have learned from comparing data to the hypothesis to answer your research question. State the answer as best you can in a sentence or two. Then return to the original problem you were given to solve, both the knowns and the unknowns that you defined in Question 1 of the PreLab. Does the answer to your research question resolve the unknowns and allow you to solve the problem? If so, write the solution. If your answer still does not provide a satisfactory resolution to your research question and the original problem, you may need to explore alternatives: a different experiment, a different hypothesis, a different research question.

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
 

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