How To Write A Hypothesis
How To Write A Hypothesis
How To Write A Hypothesis
Published on April 23, 2019 by Shona McCombes. Revised on February 15, 2021.
https://www.scribbr.com/research-process/hypotheses/
A hypothesis is a statement that can be tested by scientific research. If you want to test a
relationship between two or more things, you need to write hypotheses before you start
your experimental investigation or data collection.
What is a hypothesis?
A hypothesis states your predictions about what your research will find. It is a tentative
answer to your research question, possibly an original and untested question.
Variables in hypotheses
Hypotheses propose a relationship between two or more variables. An independent
variable is something the researcher changes or controls. A dependent variable is
something the researcher observes and measures.
In this example, the independent variable is apple consumption — the assumed cause.
The dependent variable is the frequency of doctor’s visits — the assumed effect.
Developing a hypothesis
1. Ask a question
Writing a hypothesis begins with a research question that you want to answer. The
question should be focused, specific, and researchable within the constraints of your
project.
If a first-year student starts attending more lectures, then their exam scores will
improve.
In academic research, such as yours, hypotheses are more commonly phrased in terms
of correlations or effects, where you directly state the predicted relationship between
variables.
The number of lectures attended by first-year students has a positive effect on their
exam scores.
If you are comparing two groups, the hypothesis can state what difference you expect to
find between them.
First-year students who attended most lectures will have better exam scores than those
who attended few lectures.
H0: The number of lectures attended by first-year students has no effect on their final
exam scores.
H1: The number of lectures attended by first-year students has a positive effect on their
final exam scores.
Hypothesis examples
Research question Hypothesis Null hypothesis
What are the health benefits of Increasing apple consumption in over-60s Increasing apple consumption
eating an apple a day? will result in decreasing frequency of in over-60s will have no effect
doctor’s visits. on frequency of doctor’s visits.
Which airlines have the most Low-cost airlines are more likely to have Low-cost and premium airlines
delays? delays than premium airlines. are equally likely to have
delays.
Can flexible work arrangements Employees who have flexible working There is no relationship
improve job satisfaction? hours will report greater job satisfaction between working hour
than employees who work fixed hours. flexibility and job satisfaction.
How effective is high school Teenagers who received sex education High school sex education has
sex education at reducing teen lessons throughout high school will have no effect on teen pregnancy
pregnancies? lower rates of unplanned pregnancy than rates.
teenagers who did not receive any sex
education.
What effect does daily use of There is a negative correlation between There is no relationship
social media have on the time spent on social media and attention between social media use and
attention span of under-16s? span in under-16s. attention span in under-16s.