Fundamentals of Life Science Laboratory 1: Applying the Scientific Method to Determine if Yeast is Alive Group: 405 Team 7 Names: Valeria Elizondo A01194577 Introduction: Even with the diversity of life, all living things have certain characteristics in common that allow us to distinguish them from nonliving things. For example, living things are made up of cells, they acquire materials and energy, reproduce, respond to stimuli, are homeostatic, grow and develop, and have the capacity to adapt to their environment. The purpose of this experiment is to discern the presence of life in yeast using the scientific method. If yeast is a living thing, then it will be able to acquire materials from the environment and produce energy (metabolism). During metabolism, sugar is broken down to release energy. When oxygen is present, carbon dioxide and water are also produced. When oxygen is absent, then carbon dioxide and alcohol are produced. In either case, carbon dioxide is a product; therefore, if yeast is a living thing, then it will metabolize sugar to produce carbon dioxide (gas) that will be trapped inside of a balloon, causing the balloon to increase in size.. Materials and methods: The materials to be used in this activity are as follows: ● Copy of the activity ● Yeast ● Table sugar ● Warm water (about 37C) ● 4 test tubes ● Test tube holder ● 4 balloons ● 1 250ml beaker ● Wax pencils 1. Determine the roles for each team member: 2. Number the test tubes from 1- 4 then place them in the test tube holder. 3. Add half a spoon full of sugar and half a spoon full of yeast to test tubes 1 and 2, add half a spoon full of yeast but no sugar to test tubes 3 and 4. 4. Add warm water to all of the test tubes, filling them about ¾ full, then immediately cover each test tube with a balloon. 5. Test tubes 1 and 2 are your experimental groups and test tubes 3 and 4 are your control groups. 6. Place your thumb over the balloon on each test tube and shake vigorously. 7. Observe the test tubes for 20 minutes, recording the changes in balloons volume at 10-minute intervals. Did the volume increase, decrease or stay the same? Record your results in the results table. 8. Based on the experiment that you carried out, determine the investigation problem, state your hypothesis and identify the independent and dependent variables. Record them in the scientific method table. Results: Scientific method table Problem (how does If you change the independent variable, the dependent the independent changes. variable affect the dependent variable?) Hypothesis (if this If we add yeast, then the volume will be bigger. is done to the independent variable, then this happens to the dependent variable) Independent Yeast variable (what variable are you testing?) Dependent Volume of balloon variable (What variable are you measuring?) Data table Test tube 1 Test tube 2 Test tube 3 Test tube 4 Conclusions: Balloon volume at time zero Nothing Nothing Nothing Nothing Balloon volume at after 10 minutes Medium Low Nothing Nothing Balloon volume at after 20 minutes High Medium Nothing Nothing 1. How do your results allow you to determine whether or not yeast is a living thing? It's not. It's reacting with sugar and water and expelling CO2. 2. Did your results support your hypothesis? If not, explain what you think the problem was and what you could have done differently or better. Yes. 3. Why is it necessary to have both a control group and an experimental group in the experiment? So you know what's changing. 4. Why do you need two test tubes for each group instead of just one? To eliminate chances. Evaluation Rubric: 25 points Procedure Students worked collaboratively , and correctly followed the instructions for the experiment, they cleaned up afterwards Scientific method Data Conclusions 20 points Students worked collaboratively , and correctly followed the instructions for the experiment, but they didn´t clean up afterwards 15 points Students works collaboratively, but they didn´t correctly follow the instructions for the experiment, nor did they clean up afterwards Students Students Students determined determined determined the the problem, the problem, problem, stated the stated the stated the hypothesis and hypothesis and hypothesis and identified the identified the identified the independent independent independent and dependent and dependent and dependent variables variables variables correctly. correctly. correctly. Only Two of the 1 of the three were following was answered filled in correctly. correctly. All data was Data was The data clearly and recorded in recorded was correctly the data table, incomplete. recorded in but it wasn´t the data table clear Students Students Students answered all 4 answered 2 or answered 1 of questions in 3 of the 4 the 4 questions conclusions questions in in conclusions correctly conclusions correctly correctly 0 points Students didn´t follow instructions. Nothing was filled in correctly No data was recorded Students didn´t answer any of the questions in conclusions correctly