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Sports science experiments that turn your love of the game into a winning project...
Basketball shot percentages for science fair projects can help you turn your love of basketball into award winning sports science experiments. These experiments can look at what impacts your ability to sink a shot in basketball or what it takes to improve your basketball shot percentage. Below you will find four example project ideas. Experienced basketball players will have a better shot percentage than novice basketball players. To test this hypothesis you need to develop basketball shot percentages for science fair projects. One experiment will line up ten experienced basketball players at one end of the gym and ten novice basketball players at the other end of the gym. Each player will be given ten free throw shots. You will count how many free throws each team makes out of one hundred and come up with their percentage. You will then compare the percentages to determine if your hypothesis is true or false. You will have a higher basketball shot percentage if you have both eyes open then if you only have one eye open. This is a fun hypothesis that you can test with any number of basketball shot percentages for science fair projects. One project you can complete is to gather ten volunteers. Have them shoot ten free throws with both eyes open, then cover their left eye with an eye patch and have them make ten free throws and then switch the patch to their right eye and have them shoot another ten free throws. Compare the shot percentages to see if your hypothesis is supported by your data or if the hypothesis is false. Vision is necessary to make a free throw. This is an interesting hypothesis for medicine-health science fair projects. In this experiment you will be testing to see if a person needs their sight to make a free throw, or if they can use their other senses to target the hoop. The basic experiment will simply compare free throw percentages from shots taken with your eyes open and shots taken with your eyes closed or covered. You can then advance this experiment by placing an auditory signal above the hoop and see if a person can make a free throw with their eyes closed if they have an auditory signal. Visual targets can be used to improve your free throw shot percentages. For this experiment you will use a variety of different targets to see which one is the most effective. You can try different colored targets, different shapes and different objects. This is a very advanced project that has the potential to really impress your judges. To create an advanced science fair project on basketball shot percentages you will want to apply what you know about basketball and basketball shot percentages to a problem. For example, you can turn the vision experiments above to create adaptive technology to make basketball accessible to people with disabilities. These types of projects are very valuable and will score better than those projects that have no real life applications. Copyright © 2003 - 2010 Super Science Fair Projects - All Rights Reserved.
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