TOPIC 2: INTRODUCTION TO LABORATORY PRACTICE | PHYSICS FORM 1
TOPIC 2: INTRODUCTION TO LABORATORY PRACTICE | PHYSICS FORM 1
working in the lab, individuals are advised to adhere to specific lab
rules to ensure their safety, that of other people working in the lab
and the safety of the apparatus and chemicals stored in the lab.
You should only enter the lab in the presence of a lab attendant.
Keep all exits and entrances to and from the lab clear of obstructions.
Don’t eat or drink in the lab.
Solid objects should not be thrown into the sink or water ways.
Don’t use any lab container for drinking or storing food.
Make sure that you wash your hands with soap before you leave the lab.
The cover or stopper of a particular chemical must be replaced immediately after use.
After experiments, clean your bench and leave it dry and well arranged.
Never quarrel or fight in the lab.
Never use ungloved hands to hold hot objects
- All experiments which produce poisonous fumes must be conducted in the fume chamber.
- Lab floor should not be polished to avoid slipperiness.
- Lab should have large windows and doors should be opened outwards.
- Ensure that the fire extinguisher is fixed to an appropriate place ready to be accessed in case of fire.
- In a multi storey building, a physics lab should be in the lowest floor.
is the immediate care given to accident victims or an injured person
before he/she is taken to the hospital for further medical treatment. It
reduces pain and it helps to bring hope and encouragement to accident
victims.
a small box which is placed in a safe and accessible place in the lab
and is used for the storage of instruments and chemicals for first aid.
Contents | Uses |
1. Pair of scissors | To cut adhesive tapes, bandages and gauze |
2. Rolls of adhesive tape | To hold firmly into wounds bandages, gauze and cotton wool |
3. Bandages and cotton wool | To clean and cover wounds |
4. Sterilised new razor blades | Used when treating new or old wound |
5. Sterilised wound | To clean and cover wounds |
6. Safety pin | To tighten clip bandages |
7. One jar of petroleum jelly | To apply on burns |
8. Iodine tincture | To clean fresh cuts and bruises |
9. Soap | To wash hands and wounds |
10. Antibiotic solution. | To clean wounds |
signs are signs on the containers of chemicals as warnings about the
danger of the contained chemical. There are six warning signs.
are substances can explode. An explosion is a forceful rapid reaction
which involves the throwing off particles at high speeds.


agent makes a small fire to become bigger. Heating a mixture of an
organic material with an oxidising agent may cause explosion. Eg;
heating potassium permanganate with saw dust.


by accident, a corrosive substance comes into contact with your skin,
go to the sink and wash your skin with a lot of water. Examples;
Concentrated mineral acids like HCl and HNO3 II. Concentrated alkalis
like NaOH and KOH
are very poisonous and can cause death immediately after use or after a
few days. They should not be allowed to come into contact with you.

– these substances may cause illness or endanger your health. They
won’t kill instantly but they are lethal. Irritating substances- cause
pain in eyes or on your skin and can endanger your health if you are in
contact with them doe too long.

Identification of a problem:This
is the first step where a problem is recognised. It provides
explanations to the day-to-day questions which we come across in our
lives Eg; It is observed that despite adequate feeding, vaccination,
treatment and spacious rooms, hens lay fewer eggs each day. What is the
cause of the fewer number of eggs?
Formulation of hypothesis: Hypothesis
is an intelligent guess or a tentative explanation for the observation
made. Using the example of a few eggs laid by hens per day the
hypothesis could be; a smaller number of eggs are laid because of
unusual high temperature in the room. In order to prove this hypothesis,
an experiment have to be carried out.
Experimentation: The experimentinvolvesa
series of investigations intended to discover relationships or certain
facts that may lead to the acceptance, rejection or modification of a
hypothesis. The first step in experiment is to construct a plan of
investigation.
Observation and data recording:After
setting up the experiment, a researcher makes careful observation using
their sense organs and records all events that considers relevant.
Interpretation of data:Once
a researcher has collected data, he should try to explain the meaning
of the experiment. This is an attempt to interpret the data. The data
may be presented in a form of a table, bar chart, histogram or even
graph.
Conclusion:This is either confirmation or rejection of hypothesis.
supported by evidence but not fully proved (is a hypothesis with more
evidence).
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