Grade: Grade 7 Subject: Science Unit: Chemistry Basics Lesson: 5 of 6 SAT: ProblemSolving+DataAnalysis ACT: Science

Investigation Lab

Apply scientific methods to explore chemical concepts.

Learn

Scientific Investigation Skills

  • Observation: Notice changes in color, temperature, or state
  • Evidence of reactions: Gas production, color change, precipitate, energy change
  • Safety: Follow lab safety procedures at all times
  • Data collection: Record observations accurately
  • Conclusions: Explain results using chemistry concepts

Practice

Question 1: Baking soda and vinegar produce bubbles when mixed. What evidence of a chemical reaction is this?

Answer

Gas production (carbon dioxide bubbles) is evidence of a chemical reaction.

Question 2: Why is it important to record observations during a lab?

Answer

Accurate records allow you to analyze results, identify patterns, and draw valid conclusions from your experiment.

Question 3: A clear solution turns cloudy when two liquids are mixed. What might have formed?

Answer

A precipitate (solid) may have formed, which is evidence of a chemical reaction.

Question 4: What is a control group in an experiment?

Answer

A control group is not exposed to the experimental variable and serves as a baseline for comparison.

Question 5: An experiment tests how temperature affects reaction rate. What is the independent variable?

Answer

Temperature is the independent variable (what you change).

Question 6: During a reaction, the container becomes very cold. What type of reaction is this?

Answer

An endothermic reaction (absorbs heat energy from surroundings).

Question 7: List two safety rules for a chemistry lab.

Answer

Examples: Wear safety goggles, never taste chemicals, tie back long hair, wash hands after handling chemicals.

Question 8: A student claims a reaction occurred but has no evidence. Why is this a problem?

Answer

Scientific claims must be supported by observable evidence. Without evidence, the claim cannot be verified.

Question 9: What is the dependent variable in an experiment?

Answer

The dependent variable is what you measure or observe as a result of changing the independent variable.

Question 10: How can you tell if a physical change occurred versus a chemical change?

Answer

Physical changes can usually be reversed (melting ice), while chemical changes produce new substances and show evidence like gas, color change, or energy release.