The Scientific Method

A free interactive lesson teaching kids the scientific method in 5 clear steps — observe, question, hypothesise, experiment, conclude. Based on the NCERT Class 6 Science curriculum. Includes a quick quiz.

Class 6 ScienceClass 6 / Grade 6Ages 8–11
Lesson
🧪 The Scientific Method
Scientists follow a method.ObserveQuestionHypothesiseExperimentConcluderepeat

How do scientists make discoveries? They don't just guess. They follow a clear set of steps called the scientific method. This method has been used for hundreds of years to figure out everything from gravity to antibiotics.

What is the scientific method?

The scientific method is a step-by-step process scientists use to answer questions reliably. It ensures that results are repeatable and based on evidence rather than guesswork. Every experiment — from a school project to a Nobel Prize-winning study — follows these same steps.

Step 1: Observation

Science starts with noticing something. You see mould growing on bread. You notice plants growing taller near a window. You observe that ice melts faster on a dark surface. Observation is the starting point — something you notice with your senses or with instruments.

Step 2: Question

From your observation, you form a question: Why does bread go mouldy? Does light help plants grow? Does colour affect melting speed? A good scientific question is specific and can be tested.

Step 3: Hypothesis

A hypothesis is an educated guess — a prediction about what you expect to happen and why. It must be testable. Example: "I think bread goes mouldy faster in warm conditions because warmth speeds up fungal growth."

A hypothesis can be wrong. That's fine — a wrong hypothesis still teaches us something.

Step 4: Experiment

You design a fair test: change one variable, keep all others the same. In a bread-mould experiment: put identical slices in warm and cold places, everything else the same. Record what happens carefully, with numbers and dates.

Step 5: Conclusion

After analysing your results, you draw a conclusion — does the evidence support your hypothesis or not? If not, you revise your hypothesis and test again. Science moves forward by being wrong and correcting itself.

Frequently asked questions

What are the 5 steps of the scientific method?

Observation → Question → Hypothesis → Experiment → Conclusion. Some versions add a step for 'Analysis' between experiment and conclusion.

What is a hypothesis?

A hypothesis is a testable prediction — an educated guess about what will happen and why. It must be written in a way that can be proved or disproved by an experiment.

What is a fair test in science?

A fair test changes only one variable at a time while keeping everything else the same. This ensures the result is due to the variable you changed, not something else.

Can a hypothesis be wrong?

Yes! A wrong hypothesis is not a failure — it tells you what doesn't work and points you towards a better explanation. Science progresses by disproving wrong ideas.

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