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ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

The researches express their gratitude to these who in one way or another helped them
in completion of this research study.

First, to our Mighty God, for the gift of wisdom, knowledge and giving us the courage for
the accomplishment of the study

Next, we give thanks to Ma’am Louinne Grace D Insular for watering our plants when we
were busy. We also thank her for teaching us how to do our research.

Then, to our Parents, for helping us prepare our materials for our research and for
supporting us through this learning experience

Last, to Ma’am Angel and our classmates for supporting us and letting us borrow their
materials we need for the research project.

We thank the people for helping us in this experiment and for supporting us and
encouraging us to do better.

ABSTRACT

Our experiment in research is “what is the best type of soil to grow monggo beans in.”
The soils we chose are, sandy, silt, loam, and clay. The objective of our experiment is to find out
what is the best type of soil for a monggo bean to grow in. The one that ended up growing the
biggest was the seed planted in the loam soil, and the smallest one was the plant in the clay
soil. So from our observations in the experiment, the best type of soil to grow a monggo bean
was loam soil, and the worst soil to grow a monggo bean in is clay soil.

INTRODUCTION

The “Monggo” is our chosen seed. A seed is an embryonic plant enclosed in a protective
outer covering. The formation of the seed is a part of the process of the reproduction. Soil on
the other hand is one of the requirements plants need to grow. There are four types of soil that
we used during the experiment. The soils that we used are sandy, loam, clay, and silt.
Objective:

The objecting of this study is to determine on which type of soil is best in growing monggo beans. It
specifically aims to identify which specific type of soil will produce a greater yield during harvest.

Hypothesis:

Currently, there is no significant difference between the soils, as they have many advantages.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Materials

 12 Cups/Pots
 1Kg of the 4 soils
- Loam
- Sandy
- Silt
- Clay
 12 Monggo Beans

Methods

1. First, fill the cup with its assigned soil


2. Then, make a hole in the cup with your finger
3. Put the monggo bean in the hole you just made
4. Cover the hole up
5. Water the plants
Results: The best type of soil to plant a monggo bean is the loam soil. It makes it grow big, grow fast, and
lets it live longer. In second place we got silt soil, even though silt soiled plants can grow faster than
ones in the loamy soil, it does not grow as big and live as long as a plant in the loamy soil. Third place,
sandy soil it grew as fast as the silt soil but did die easily. Last place we got clay soil, it grew last, was the
smallest, and died first out of all the plants.

Discussion:

One of the problems in farming is soils with low amount of nutrients, which can trigger fewer amounts
of crops to harvest. Monggo is one of the popular crops that suffer from bad soil condition. We might
have alternatives to prevent this from happening. So we will use four different types of soil for plants to
flourish in and determine the result.

Conclusion:

The best soil for planting monggo is loamy soil, as it makes the plant grow fast, big, and makes it live
longer, thus making it generate more harvest. While the worst kind of soil from our observations is clay
soil, the plants in the soil slowly grew, and the monggo beans that was in the clay soil broke through the
ground the last.

Recommendations

- Measure each plant everyday


- List the centimeters of each one of them in a table
- Keep track of their growth and put all the data in a safe, new, notebook.
- Instead of a pot, use a small plastic cup
- Note what day the plant grew
- Note how long the plant has been alive
Images:

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