You might imagine that scientific thinking differs from the sorts of reasoning tools that you use in your everyday life — that scientists go around with a head full of equations through which they view the world. In fact, many aspects of scientific thinking are just extensions of the way you probably think everyday:
Want to develop your scientific outlook? Try to consciously apply these habits of mind to the natural world around you:
For further details log on website :
http://undsci.berkeley.edu/article/think_science
- Ever seen something surprising and tried to figure out how it happened? Perhaps you've seen a magician make his assistant disappear from a box and wondered if the trick involved a trap door ….
- Ever sought out more evidence (e.g., by looking for a joint in the floor beneath the box)?
- Ever come up with a new explanation for a mystery? Perhaps the trick used a mirror to reflect an image of an empty wall ….
Scientific ways of thinking can be applied to everyday life. |
- Question what you observe. How does bleach lighten your clothes? How do bees find their way back to the hive? What causes the phases of the moon?
- Investigate further. Find out what is already known about your observations. Your sister says that bleach washes chemicals out of fabric, while your chemistry book says that bleach is good at breaking molecular bonds that cause chemicals to appear colored.
- Be skeptical. You've heard that honeybees use the sun to navigate, but does that really make sense? What would they do on cloudy days?
- Try to refute your own ideas. Look at things from the other side of the argument. You'd always assumed that the phases of the moon were caused by the shadow of the Earth falling on the moon — but if that were really the case, then how is it that we can sometimes see both the moon and the sun in the sky overhead?
- Seek out more evidence. Does bleach work better on some sorts of stains than others? Do bees leave the hive on cloudy days? Is there any relationship between the phase of the moon and where it appears in the night sky?
- Be open-minded. Change your mind if the evidence warrants it. If everything you learn about the moon clashes with the idea of lunar phases being caused by the Earth's shadow, perhaps you should give up that idea and look for other explanations.
- Think creatively. Try to come up with alternate explanations for what you observe. Maybe bees also use landmarks to get back to their hives, maybe they use the Earth's magnetic field, maybe they follow some sort of scent trail, or maybe they use a combination of navigation methods ….
For further details log on website :
http://undsci.berkeley.edu/article/think_science
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