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  1. Saeed

    Secondary Physics Tutor Near Me
    I am a confident and caring individual who finds great satisfaction in teaching Arabic and/or Islamic Studies.I feel I am unique in my tutoring abilities as being born and raised in the UK but then moving to live in a soley Arabic speaking environment for 6 years has given me a much deeper understan...
  2. Roberta

    Private Secondary Physics Tuition
    *Over 1000 hours of tutoring experience* I am a Biomedical Science graduate and a current medical student. I have 6 years of tutoring experience teaching science subjects from GCSE level to A-Level and UCAT preparation. I have 3 years of experience preparing students for 11+ and recently 7+ entr...
  3. Fahad

    Secondary Physics Tuition Near Me
    I am an Electrical Engineer, working as a professional engineer for the last 10 years. I have good knowledge and understanding in Engineering and its related subjects like Maths, Physics and computers. I have done CRB Check I target my students to understand the concept behind the theory so they can...
  4. Jawad

    Private Secondary Physics Tutor
    I have an Honours Degree from Imperial College London for BEng Joint Maths and Computer Science. I have also achieved A*A*A*A in my A-Level for Maths, Further Maths, Physics and Computer Science as well as 8A*s, 3As and 1B in my GCSEs. My online lessons mainly happen through Microsoft OneNote. Every...
  5. Muddassar

    Home Tuition for Secondary Physics
    I am an experimental physicist at the King's College London working in quantum optomechanics, specifically, I am interested in developing new and exciting experiments to push our understanding of quantum physics. Other than working in the lab, I enjoy cycling, traveling and reading fiction. What I t...
  6. Fatih

    Secondary Physics Lessons
    Fully qualified, lead teacher with 10 years of teaching experience. Examiner for GCSE & A-level. Can teach all three Sciences up to GCSE (Combined and Triple Science) & Biology up to A-level. Having taught in numerous Secondary schools in London, I have a strong pedagogical understanding which is...
  7. David
    Premium

    Private Secondary Physics Tuition
    CURRENTLY AVAILABLE FOR SUMMER TUITION. I originally graduated in Mathematics from Leicester University. and spent many years working as an Analyst/Programmer for companies such as British Gas, Spring I.T. Solutions and Dudley Council. I am now a tutor and cover all aspects of Mathematics, with a p...
  8. Muhammad

    Secondary Physics Lessons
    I am highly dedicated, self motivated individual and passionate about teaching. My tutoring approach is flexible and planned to meet individual's need and learning pace.
  9. Habib
    Premium

    Secondary Physics Teacher
    I am a child-centred, enthusiastic, hard working and highly motivated teacher who worked at independent schools, Grammar schools and produced 5th best GCE A level results in England in one year. I have been rated 'GOOD' by Ofsted. Child-centred and give detail explanation to concepts.
  10. Naina

    Secondary Physics Tutoring
    Teacher of GCSE Physics /Combined Science. I have 20 years experience of teaching and I am a secondary school science teacher with the specialism of Physics. I teach all three sciences of combined science in GCSE. I have the passion of teaching and making difference in student’s attainment. I have...

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Fun Secondary Physics Experiment - Static Electricity

A fun way to discover about positively and negatively charged particles using basic household items. Is it true that opposites attract?

Things you will need:

  • Two blown-up balloons with string attached
  • An aluminium can
  • Some woollen fabric
  • Your hair

What to do:

  • First rub the two balloons one-by-one against the woollen fabric.
  • Then try moving the balloons together. Are they attracted to each other?
  • Rub one of the balloons against your hair then slowly pull it away (do this in front of a mirror so you can see what happens).
  • Put the aluminium can on it's side on a table. Rub the balloon on your hair again then hold the balloon close to the can and watch as it rolls towards it. Slowly move the balloon away from the can and it will follow.

What you will see:

  • By rubbing the balloons against the woollen fabric you have created static electricity. This involves negatively charged particles (which are called electrons) jumping to positively charged objects.
  • When you rub the balloons against the fabric or your hair they become negatively charged, they have taken some of the electrons from the fabric or hair and left them positively charged.
  • It thus appears to be true when we say opposites attract. Your positively charges hair is attracted to the negatively charged balloon and will rise up to meet it.
  • This is also the case with the aluminium can which is drawn to the negatively charged balloon as the area near it becomes positively charged.

Secondary Physics Joke

Q: What did the receiver say to the radio wave?

Secondary Physics Fact

If you hold up a grain of sand, the patch of sky it covers contains ~10,000 galaxies!