Electricity
Introduction
Students have many everyday experiences related to electrical behaviour.
Many of the devices they and their families use on a daily basis require
current electricity to function, for example, lights, television, toaster,
and so on. From a very early age children are instructed on the dangers
of household electricity. Students will mostly be familiar with static
electric effects of one sort or another, such as hair sticking up when
rubbed, shocks from metal rails or cars, and sparks from nylon clothing.
The activities in this topic show students the key idea that underpins
many of the electrical effects they experience.
The activities in this topic are related to two areas in electricity: ‘electrostatics’ (or
static electricity) and ‘current electricity’. Electrostatics
relates to electrical phenomena where there has been a separation of electric
charge (usually associated with electrons) within objects or between objects.
Current electricity relates to electrical phenomena where there are moving
electric charges (again, associated with electrons) that travel along wires
and through electrical devices such as globes and buzzers.
Key concepts of electricity
The activities in this topic are designed to explore the following key
concepts:
Electrostatics
Early years
- Friction can cause static electricity.
- Objects can become electrically charged by rubbing them.
- Charged objects can attract uncharged objects.
- Charged objects may attract some charged objects and repel other charged
objects.
Middle years
- Electrons are part of all atoms that make up all substances.
- Objects can be charged by rubbing.
- Some materials are charged more easily than others.
- An object becomes charged when it loses or gains electrons.
- Objects can carry either a positive or negative charge, depending
on what they are made of and what they are rubbed with.
- A negatively charged object has gained electrons; a positively charged
object has lost electrons.
- Objects with the same electric charge repel each other; objects with
opposite charge attract each other.
- If electrons that are added to an object spread out all over the object,
the object is called a ‘conductor’.
- If electrons that are added to an object stay on the object where
they were placed, the object is called an ‘insulator’.
- Charged objects will attract uncharged objects.
- Charged objects will discharge (lose their charge) over time as charge
leaks to the atmosphere.
- Sparks are the movement of electrons through the air from one object
to another. Lightning is a sparking effect.
- ‘Earthing’ is where charge is shared between a charged
object and a large
conductor (usually the ground).
Current electricity
Early years
- Electricity can move or flow.
- Electrical devices such as globes require two connections with wire
to a battery to function.
- The two connections provide a complete path, or loop, around which
electricity can flow.
- The strength of the electricity depends on the number of batteries
(and their size in volts).
- Electricity makes a lot of things work, for example, globes, televisions,
toasters, etcetera.
- Household electricity is dangerous.
- Some materials allow electricity to pass through them and other materials
do not. Those which do allow electricity to pass through them are called
conductors.
Middle years
The concepts listed below were developed by Summers, Kruger and Mant (1997),
who believe that such concepts can be acquired readily by primaryschool
teachers and taught effectively to their students.
- An electric circuit is a complete (unbroken) pathway.
- Electricity is made up of electrons.
- Electrons are very, very tiny particles.
- An electric current consists of a flow of electrons.
- Electrons are part of all atoms that make up all substances.
- The electrons are in the wires all the time.
- Conductors have free electrons, which can move.
- The battery provides the push to move the electrons.
- The battery voltage is a measure of the push.
- A chemical reaction in the battery creates an electric field, which
produces the push.
- All the electrons move instantaneously.
- The size of the current in a circuit depends on the resistance.
- A series circuit has all the components in a line. There is only one
pathway.
- The current is the same all around a series circuit.
- In a series circuit, adding more globes increases the resistance and
decreases the current. The globes are dimmer and equally dim.
- A parallel circuit has branches. There is more than one pathway.
- Identical globes in parallel are as bright as one globe alone. The
current in each branch is the same.
- The current in the battery leads is the sum of the currents in the
separate branches.
- In a globe, moving electrons collide with fixed atoms in the filament,
causing them to vibrate.
- The vibrating atoms emit light and heat.
(Summers, M, Kruger, C & Mant, J 1997, Teaching
electricity effectively: a research-based guide for primary science,
Association for Science Education, Hatfield)
Students' alternative conceptions of electricity
Research into students' ideas about this topic has identified the following
non-scientific conceptions:
- The terms 'electricity', 'current', 'power' and 'energy' mean the same
thing.
- In a circuit that contains wires, a battery and a globe, the battery
stores electricity/power/current which flows to the globe where it is
consumed.
- The globe in an electric circuit takes what it needs from the battery.
- Energy is used up by a working globe.
- The thing that gets used up in an electric circuit is current.
- For a circuit that contains a battery and a globe, the globe lights
up because:
- the current from each end of the battery clashes in the globe
to provide the light (clashing-currents model)
- some of the current from one end of the battery is lost as it
passes through the globe (consumption model)
- current from one end of the battery is all used up in the globe,
making the second wire unnecessary (source-sink model).
- Batteries store a certain amount of electricity or charge.
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