Learning focus
Develop safe and reproducible practical methods, record precise observations and measurements, process evidence and evaluate experimental quality.
Evidence-based conclusion
State the trend and support it with data. Then explain using chemistry if requested. A conclusion should answer the investigation question rather than repeat the method.

Random error
Random effects cause scatter, such as inconsistent timing or reading uncertainty. Repeats and averaging reduce their influence but do not remove systematic bias.

Systematic error
A calibration offset, consistent heat loss or a zero error shifts results in one direction. Repeating without fixing the cause does not solve it. Calibrate, redesign or apply a justified correction.
Specific improvements
Match improvement to limitation: use a lid and insulation to reduce heat loss; use a gas syringe instead of counting bubbles; use a thermostatic bath to control temperature. “Use better apparatus” is not specific enough.
Practical or data skill
Rewrite vague evaluations into limitation-effect-improvement chains.
Examination tip
Never use “human error” alone; name the exact action and its effect on the result.
Review questions and suggested answers
Question 1
What should a conclusion contain?
Suggested answer
A trend supported by data and an appropriate explanation.
Question 2
Do repeats remove systematic error?
Suggested answer
No.
Question 3
Give a specific improvement for heat loss.
Suggested answer
Use an insulated container with a lid.