Geology 113
Portfolio Project
Guideline 4


4. How do we construct valid scientific arguments in our report?

Your team is being asked to place three types of natural disasters in order of most to least likely to affect Delaware, and to explain each ranking by relating evidence you have found to theory for the causes of these events. Part of the solving the problem is for your team to decide and define what is meant by "affect Delaware." The criteria for scoring your report define how your arguments will be judged, so you should think about them while developing your report. As you are crafting your arguments, it will also help you to continuously discuss and think about the following things (I have underlined key phrases that appear in the criteria for scoring the report and presentation):

While the portfolio project is not designed to turn you into a philosopher of science, the criteria used to score your work stem from some basic notions about how scientists construct scientific arguments:

  1. sound scientific arguments explain the limitations of the theory, the limitations of the evidence, and the ways that evidence and theory are connected to one another;

  2. sound scientific arguments explain the anomalous data -- the rare hurricane, volcano, or earthquake that occur where theory least predicts.
For these reasons, you should develop your arguments by combining the evidence you have examined with scientific theory for the causes of these events and pointing out the limitations of the theories and the evidence. The future of Newcastle County residents rests upon the quality and soundness of your arguments.




Guideline Index Guideline 5: How do we prepare and give an effective group presentation?
Geology 113 Home Page