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Secondary Physics Tutors Near Me

First Tutors is the best place to find quality private Secondary Physics tutors. If you are looking for "the best Secondary Physics tutors near me", we can help.

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  1. Norman Julian

    Secondary Physics Tutor Near Me
    I am an experienced and successful A-level and GCSE tutor of Chemistry,BioIogy, Physics and Maths. I am a fully qualified teacher and have a degree, and masters degree in Chemistry. I researched into analytical techniques at university and in industry, and have always been fascinated to teach. I hav...
  2. Toby

    Private Secondary Physics Tuition
    Welcome! I am a full-time GP but specialise in tutoring GCSE Science in my spare time. I only take on 2 students per academic year to ensure that you receive my full attention and energy! I was awarded my medical degree by King’s College London and graduated top of class at the University of Bris...
  3. Emily

    Secondary Physics Tuition Near Me
    *in-person fully booked* ONLINE AVAILABILITY I am a Chemical Engineering masters Graduate (2021) from Heriot-Watt University and work in the financial services industry. I am a confident, friendly, reassuring tutor. I have experienced every level of the education system, which gives me another d...
  4. Mark

    Private Secondary Physics Tutor
    I am a current head of science and I have been a science teacher for 28 years, being Head of Science at 3 schools. My specialist subject is Physics but I have taught GCSE science and level 2/3 engineering. My GCSE and A level results at all my schools have been consistently above national average. M...
  5. Anisha

    Home Tuition for Secondary Physics
    I am a second year medical student and have experience in tutoring for 5 years. I have also worked in multiple schools and with a range of children. My approach to teaching is to make the content simple so the student will be able to understand and enjoy learning the subject. I usually teach the co...
  6. Moses

    Secondary Physics Lessons
    I am intelligent and yet polite and frendly person. The followinfg statements summarise who lam and what l belive about learning: All students are capable of learning. All learners are unique; they are influenced by many factors including their culture, background and prior experiences. All learne...
  7. Pete

    Private Secondary Physics Tuition
    I have been teaching Physics for 24 years, half of which as a head of dept. I have worked in three academically selective independent schools in Hertfordshire teaching students of all secondary school keystages. I have also tutored students studying OCR, AQA and Edexcel examination boards, so have a...
  8. Ross

    Secondary Physics Lessons
    I am a lecturer in Physics at the University of Aberdeen and have been teaching since I began doing my undergraduate degree. I have a PhD in physics. Teaching maths and physics necessarily involves solving problems, so I do a lot of joint problem solving. But it's important to actually learn a subje...
  9. Manjari

    Secondary Physics Teacher
    Hi, I am part time tutor. I try to understand the need of each student, and analyse their way of learning, which helps me to conclude the methodology to be adopted for teaching. I believe there are no bad students just the bad teacher.
  10. John

    Secondary Physics Tutoring
    I went to university for a long time and learned a lot about Science and Maths. Then I decided to do a PGCE and have been teaching and tutoring Science and Maths ever since. Being a qualified teacher means I am very familiar with every stage of the education system and its challenges (exams!) and ho...

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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!