While finishing up your shift as the stock manager at Circus Supermarket, the store manager tells you that he desperately needs some help with an inventory problem. In the back of the store, he shows you an unmarked, unopened tin can and explains that the owners of the store are threatening to fire him and all his staff if they cannot keep track of the items that they sell. There are no inventory records to trace the origin of the can, so he asks you, the stock manager, to help him figure out what is inside.
There is one catch. He does not want to open the can, just in case there is something expensive inside. Instead, you as the stock manager will ask questions about the can from the store manager, your instructor.
- Ask at least two questions:  
- You should first ask at least       two questions about the can itself, and your instructor will answer all       of the questions you have about the can. 
 
- Be sure to read the questions       posed by your classmates to avoid asking the same questions and to       further expand the investigation with new questions. 
 
- You can also request that the       store manager do things to the can and then report back with the results.       For example, if you would like to ask, "What sounds do you hear when       you shake the can?" that can count as one of your questions. 
 
 
- Create your hypothesis.  
- After you have asked at least two questions of your own and have collected additional evidence based on       the questions your classmates have provided, you should then develop and       post a specific, testable hypothesis about what is in the can. 
 
- Your hypothesis should include       what you believe is in the can, along with the supporting evidence you       collected from the discussion that led you to that hypothesis. 
 
 
Reference: 
Trefil, J., & Hazen, R.M. (2011). The Sciences: An integrated approach.  Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.