Asked by Random
Throughout the reflection, make sure you have a copy of the Student Guide and your data tables. Use the drop-down menus to complete the statements.
The independent variables in Part I, the ones intentionally manipulated, are the
.
The independent variable in Part II, the one that is intentionally manipulated, is the
.
The dependent variable for both Parts I and II, the one that you measure the response in, is the
.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
I don’t have your Student Guide or data tables, so I can’t fill the exact words for those drop-downs. Can you either paste the list of possible drop-down choices or upload/copy the Student Guide or your data table headers? Then I’ll pick the correct options.
Meanwhile, here’s how to identify each blank so you can choose the right items from the menus yourself:
- The independent variables in Part I (the ones intentionally manipulated) are the factors you deliberately changed in Part I’s procedure. Check the Part I procedure and the column headings in the Part I data table — whatever was varied (for example: temperature, concentration, solution type, light intensity, mass, angle, etc.) are the independent variables.
- The independent variable in Part II (the one intentionally manipulated) is the single factor you varied in Part II’s procedure. Check Part II’s procedure and its data table — that one heading is the independent variable (for example: time, substrate concentration, applied force, voltage, etc.).
- The dependent variable for both Parts I and II (the one you measure the response in) is whatever you recorded as the outcome in the data tables — the measured response (for example: reaction rate, time to complete an event, volume of gas produced, distance traveled, current, pH change, percent change, etc.).
If you paste the actual dropdown choices or the parts of your Student Guide/data tables, I’ll select the exact answers for you.
Meanwhile, here’s how to identify each blank so you can choose the right items from the menus yourself:
- The independent variables in Part I (the ones intentionally manipulated) are the factors you deliberately changed in Part I’s procedure. Check the Part I procedure and the column headings in the Part I data table — whatever was varied (for example: temperature, concentration, solution type, light intensity, mass, angle, etc.) are the independent variables.
- The independent variable in Part II (the one intentionally manipulated) is the single factor you varied in Part II’s procedure. Check Part II’s procedure and its data table — that one heading is the independent variable (for example: time, substrate concentration, applied force, voltage, etc.).
- The dependent variable for both Parts I and II (the one you measure the response in) is whatever you recorded as the outcome in the data tables — the measured response (for example: reaction rate, time to complete an event, volume of gas produced, distance traveled, current, pH change, percent change, etc.).
If you paste the actual dropdown choices or the parts of your Student Guide/data tables, I’ll select the exact answers for you.
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