The scientific method is the structured way we ask questions, form hypotheses, test them with evidence, and revise our ideas when data disagree. It is not one fixed recipe: it blends observation, controlled experiments, modeling, and peer review so claims can be checked and improved over time.
Topic
Foundations
Scientific method
Topic intro
New here? Ignore the full sidebar for a minute. On a first pass, follow the core path in order. The sidebar is for jumping later, not for deciding where to begin.
First pass
Do these in order. Each step is short on purpose.
- 1. Start hereLearn · Overview
Get the big picture, the objectives, and the nearby connections before you start solving.
- 2. Work through the short lessonsPart 1 - From observation to testable ques…
Use Next / Previous through the remaining 5 short lessons in order.
- 3. Check whether it sticksReview
Use this after the lessons to test recall without leaning on the exact sentence pattern from the page.
- 4. Try the labMethod lab
Use the topic in a small challenge once the main ideas feel familiar.
Use after the first pass
These tools help with retrieval, expansion, and review once the main idea is already in your head.
- SprintCompete under pressure
Use sprint after the first pass for faster, higher-yield mixed questions that stay anchored to the lesson ideas.
- CardsRun short recall
Best after the first pass, when you want retrieval rather than first exposure.
- QuizzesCheck under pressure
Use these when you want a sharper check, not when you are still figuring out the core idea.
- MapSee the wider graph
Use the map when you want the dependency picture, not when you are deciding where to begin.