A scientific hypothesis is a clear, testable statement predicting how one variable will affect another in an experiment.

What a hypothesis is

  • It is an “educated guess” about the outcome of an experiment, based on prior knowledge or research.
  • It must be testable, meaning you can collect data to support or reject it.
  • It links an independent variable (what you change) to a dependent variable (what you measure).

Example:
“If plants receive more hours of sunlight per day (independent variable), then their height after four weeks (dependent variable) will increase.”

Simple step-by-step guide

  1. Ask a focused question
    • Example: “Does temperature affect how fast yeast produces gas?”
  1. Do quick background research
    • Read a textbook, notes, or a reliable website to understand what is already known.
  1. Identify your variables
    • Independent variable: what you change (temperature).
    • Dependent variable: what you measure (amount of gas, height of foam, etc.).
  1. Make a clear prediction
    • Decide what you expect to happen based on logic or background research.
  1. Write it as a testable statement
    • Common formats:
      • If–then: “If ___, then ___.”
   * Declarative: “Increasing X will increase/decrease Y.”

Good hypothesis checklist

A strong science hypothesis usually:

  • Names both variables (independent and dependent).
  • Is specific about the group or conditions (e.g., “bean plants” instead of just “plants”).
  • Predicts a direction if possible (increase, decrease, no change).
  • Is short, clear, and written in the present tense.
  • Can be supported or rejected using measurable data, not opinions.

Examples for school science

  • “If the amount of fertilizer given to tomato plants increases, then their average height after three weeks will increase.”
  • “If the temperature of water increases, then sugar will dissolve faster.”
  • “If the intensity of light increases, then the rate of photosynthesis in pondweed will increase.”

You can also write a null hypothesis , which says there is no effect:

  • “Changing the amount of fertilizer has no effect on the height of tomato plants.”

Quick formula you can copy

Use this pattern and fill in the blanks:

If __________ (independent variable change), then __________ (dependent variable result) because __________ (brief scientific reason).

Example:
“If the temperature of water increases, then sugar will dissolve faster because higher temperature increases the motion of particles, helping sugar mix more quickly.”

TL;DR:
To write a hypothesis in science, pick a clear question, choose your independent and dependent variables, and turn your prediction into a short, testable if–then statement that uses precise, measurable terms.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.