How do I formulate a hypothesis for an engineering project?
Question by Gulienne Pierre: How do I formulate a hypothesis for an engineering project?
I am building a device that could treat a certain disease….so how do I formulate a hypothesis?
Also, I’m not really sure how to collect numerical data, because it is a device …I need help lol sorry I am in high school. And how do I keep on journal for my project? What should I write inside of it??
I’m sorry if these questions may seem stupid, but this is my first engineering project and I have no guidance.
Best answer:
Answer by Nicky
This is all rather vague.
Your journal should directly record everything you do related to the project.
If you want numerical data, you must devise some measurement that will produce numbers. There should be two at least: some measure of the application of your device, and some measure of the results.
The routine hypothesis to test is whether or not your process had an effect, hopefully beneficial. For this, you will need to be able to compare one bunch with treatment, and another bunch without the treatment, and look to see if there is a significant difference between the two groups.
What do you think? Answer below!
these are my thoughts — they might be wrong,
your hypothesis should be “that the device will be able to treat the disease” (obviously it should be more detailed and specific).
the “numerical data” – you can substitute basic research for this,
a journal is documentation – lessons and data that you collect from your research. “numerical” data should be put into its own section.
Actually when you actually build your device or design it, you should do mathematical calculations. This should probably be the numerical data, actually.
You should run this by your teacher to see if it’s the right direction.