Biology 101
Group Poster Sessions
Fast
Plant Experiments
December 3, 2008
Click Here for
Poster Session Grading Rubric
Your group poster presentation should include 4 posters or sections.
Poster #1: Introduction
- Summary of combined preliminary research from the group.
- Provide a list of statements that address what you learned from
your
research about the interaction of your independent variable with plant
growth and reproduction.
- Why do you think your study is an important contribution to the
scientific knowledge base?
- Attach a typed bibliography of your sources to the back of the
poster.
Poster #2: Experimental Design Flow Chart or
Diagram
See the flow chart on page G9 of the lab manual for
reference and include these sections:
- Statement of your hypothesis and your original prediction at the
top
of this section.
- A FLOW CHART of your experimental design including;
- An ILLUSTRATION communicating the basic design of the
experiment.
- The specific values of the treatments of your Independent
Variable
- A list of Control Variables including types and amounts of
materials
used. (Control variables include all other conditions that you kept
constant for all your treatments. Control variables might be considered
as potential independent variables - just ones you did not choose to
test.)
- Data collection methods
- Data transformation methods
Poster #3: Results
- Include computer generated or neatly hand drawn graphs for each
of
your dependent variables.
- Provide a title for each graph.
- Include values for all treatments of one dependent variable on
the
same graph.
- Label the horizontal axis with the values of the independent
variable and the vertical axis with the values of the dependent
variable
for each of your graphs.
Poster #4: Conclusions:
- Do you accept
or reject your hypothesis based on your data?
- Support your conclusions by comparing your results for each of
your
dependent variables with the information from your original preliminary
research as a series of bulleted statements.
- What do you think you have contributed to the scientific
knowledge
base?
- Explain unexpected outcomes if possible.
- Describe the next hypothesis and experimental design your results
suggest.
Each group will present their poster
during the last lab meeting of the semester.
- Each research group member will be expected to make a
substantial contribution to the development of the posters and the oral
presentation.
- Evaluation will be based on the above directions and will include
instructor and peer evaluation components.
- Individual lab instructors may modify this standard set of
directions to better match the experience of their lab sections.