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Forensic Science Observational Skills

Forensic Science Observational Skills

Assessment

Presentation

Science

9th - 12th Grade

Hard

Created by

Joseph Anderson

FREE Resource

13 Slides • 11 Questions

1

Observation Skills

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2

Dropdown

​ ​
studies the effects of chemicals inside the human body

3

Multiple Choice

True or false: The use of Fingerprints for identifying a person is a relatively new idea

1

True

2

False

4

Drag and Drop

The​
effect posits that sometimes a jury may be swayed away from a conviction due to a lack of "sufficient" DNA Evidence.
Drag these tiles and drop them in the correct blank above
CSI
Sherlock Holes
Sherlock Holmes
Encyclopedia Brown
NCIS
Law & Order

5

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  • Define observation and the process that occurs in the brain

  • ​Understand factors that could affect an eyewitness account

  • Compare the reliability of eyewitness accounts to actual events

Lesson Objectives

6

Introduction

  • Any investigation requires specific skills

    • Observations

    • Interpretations

    • Reports

  • Observation is the first and most important step in the process

    • Without good observations, your interpretations are bound to be faulty

7

What is Observation?

  • Observation: what a person perceives using their senses

    • Uses all five senses

    • We are constantly observing all around us, but are not aware of it

      • Not possible to process every single stimulus, so our brains highlight the most important information to us

        • Our brain highlights changes as they happen as important

        • Most observations exclude information we deem unimportant

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8

Perception

  • Perception: interpreting information received from the senses

    • Perception is limited by an individual and does not always reflect reality

      • our brains can fill in blanks when they think something is missing

      • We use our memories to tell us information that we don't directly know

    • People will stick to what they believe they saw, regardless of whether or not it is true

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9

  • On the table we have three flavors of yogurt

  • Come up and taste the three flavors and determine what the flavor of each cup is

Check Your Perception Activity

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10

Poll

Which Cup Contained the Mango Peach yogurt?

A

B

C

11

Observations by Witnesses

  • Witness Observations often play a major role in any investigation

    • It is important to identify factors that could alter a person's perception

      • Was the person doing a specific activity?

      • What was the person's Emotional state?

        • Extreme emotions can distract you from the world around you

    • An extremely unusual event can cause a person to notice more around them

    • Outside events can cause a person to change their memory

12

13

Eyewitness Accounts

  • Eyewitness: a person who has seen someone/something and can communicate what they saw

    • Can be influenced or biased by outside factors

    • Memories change over time

    • When a person is an eyewitness, a prosecutor and defense attorney needs to identify where they may be biased and determine how much of an effect that has on their testimony

  • Has to determine between the fact and opinion to form a logical pattern of events

    • Example of a Fact: The suspect ran away

    • Example of an Opinion: The suspect felt guilty and ran away

14

The Innocence Project

  • Started in 1992

  • Was formed to reexamine older cases that relied on eyewitness testimony with modern technologies

    • Found that 87 % of wrongful convictions resulted from eyewitness errors

      • Errors occurred across all ages, genders, and races

15

Poll

How good do you think you would be as an eyewitness?

Very Bad

Bad

Good

Very Good

16

Multiple Choice

Question image

Everyday life Observation: How many trees are on the grass island facing Pickle Road in front of the school?

1

2

2

4

3

6

4

8

5

10

17

Hotspot

Which of these pennies is a "real" penny, with the correct form?

18

19

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How to be a Good Observer

  • Make a conscious effort to examine your environment systematically

    • when studying an area/object, go slowly over the entire area

  • Practice Turning off Filters and looking at everything closely

    • Rely less on emotional responses and more on logical ones

  • Look for patterns in what you see, and adjust as needed

    • Don't focus on the first pattern you see, but recalibrate as you collect more information

  • Make allowances for faulty memories

    • Write notes, draw sketches, take pictures

21

Multiple Choice

What is the interpretation of information received by the senses?

1

Analyzing

2

Perception

3

Interpretation

4

Observation

22

Multiple Choice

True or False: The fine details involved in events during strong emotional times are easy to commit to our long-term memory.

1

True

2

False

23

Multiple Choice

Question image

True or False: An eyewitness testimony should be accepted no matter what any other evidence says

1

True

2

False

24

Dropdown

Question image
In the bunny effect, participants who were shown an advertisement for Disneyland with​
told stories of meeting the character while on vacation, even though this is impossible. This shows how the human memory is ​
accurate.

Observation Skills

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