Hero background

Introduction to Electricity

Science • 30 • 25 students • Created with AI following Aligned with the NCCA Primary Curriculum, Junior Cycle & Senior Cycle (Leaving Cert) specifications

Download now

Free PDF · we'll email you a copy

Science
30
25 students
25 April 2025

Teaching Instructions

This is lesson 1 of 4 in the unit "Exploring Electric Energy". Lesson Title: Introduction to Electricity Lesson Description: Students will explore the basic concept of electricity, including what it is and how it is generated. They will engage in a discussion about everyday uses of electricity and identify common electrical devices in their homes.

Introduction to Electricity

Overview

This 30-minute lesson introduces third-class students (8-9 years old) to the basic concept of electricity. Through a blend of discussion, visual aids, and inquiry-based learning, pupils will explore what electricity is, how it is generated, and identify common electrical devices found in their homes. This lesson is designed to ignite curiosity and lay the foundation for the following lessons in the "Exploring Electric Energy" unit.


Curriculum Links & Standards (IE Curriculum Reference)

  • Primary Science Curriculum (1999, Revised 2015)
    Strand: Energy and Forces
    • Strand Unit: Electrical Energy
      • Explore everyday uses of electricity
      • Investigate sources/generation of electricity
      • Develop awareness of electrical safety
  • SESE (Science, Environment and Social Education) Integration
    • Introduce environmental awareness in the context of energy use
  • Aistear & Play (Infusing discovery through discussion and interaction)

Learning Intentions

By the end of this lesson, students will be able to:

  • Define electricity in simple terms suitable for their age.
  • Recognise how electricity can be generated (basic examples).
  • Identify common electrical devices in their homes.
  • Discuss why electricity is important in everyday life.

Success Criteria

  • I can explain what electricity is.
  • I can name at least three devices that use electricity.
  • I can explain one way electricity is made.
  • I listen respectfully and share my ideas with the class.

Resources Required

  • Whiteboard & markers
  • A large poster or PowerPoint slide with pictures of generating electricity (e.g., power station, wind turbine, battery)
  • Picture cards of common household electrical devices (e.g., lamp, TV, toaster, hairdryer)
  • Chart paper & sticky notes for brainstorming
  • Small torch or battery-operated device (for live demonstration)

Lesson Structure

1. Introduction & Engagement (5 minutes)

  • Begin with a short, exciting question: “What would you miss the most if there was no electricity in your home for one day?”
  • Capture some responses on the board to personalise the learning.
  • Briefly introduce the word "electricity" and its importance. Use simple language: “Electricity is a kind of power that helps things work.”

2. Development: Exploring Electricity (15 minutes)

a. What is Electricity? (5 mins)

  • Use the torch/battery device to demonstrate electricity in action. Ask: “What makes the torch light up?”
  • Explain electricity as the energy that flows to power devices.
  • Show the generation poster and explain simply how electricity comes from different places like power stations, batteries or wind turbines.
  • Highlight that we cannot see electricity but we can see and feel its effects.

b. Everyday Uses & Devices (10 mins)

  • Display picture cards of household electrical devices around the room or on the board.
  • Ask pupils to name these devices and discuss how each uses electricity.
  • On chart paper, brainstorm more devices used at home and note pupil input.
  • Discuss how electricity helps with cooking, heating, lighting, communication, entertainment.
  • Quick interactive Q&A: “Could we watch TV without electricity?” “How do you think your phone or tablet gets power?”

3. Consolidation & Reflective Talk (5 minutes)

  • Group discussion: “Why is electricity important to us?” Encourage pupils to share their ideas aloud.
  • Summarise key learning points on the whiteboard: What is electricity? Where does it come from? What does it power?
  • Emphasise responsibility: briefly introduce the idea of saving electricity and staying safe.

4. Assessment & Plenary (5 minutes)

  • Exit Slip Activity: Each pupil draws or writes one electrical device they use and one thing they learned about electricity today on a sticky note.
  • Collect these sticky notes and praise the class for their participation and curiosity.

Differentiation Strategies

  • Support: Provide visual aids and sentence starters for pupils needing additional help. Pair weaker readers with peers during brainstorming.
  • Extension: Challenge quick finishers to explain one new way electricity can be generated or to think about ways to save electricity at home.
  • Incorporate EAL support by using clear, simple vocabulary and visual aids.

Cross-Curricular Opportunities

  • English: Use vocabulary related to electricity in speaking and listening.
  • Geography: Locate Ireland’s renewable energy sources in following lessons.
  • SPHE (Personal Development): Discuss safety related to electricity.

Teaching Tips & Innovations

  • Incorporate a brief "electricity myth buster" moment, debunking common misconceptions (e.g., “Electricity is not magic, it follows rules!”).
  • Use interactive questioning to keep students engaged and thinking critically.
  • Incorporate elements of storytelling/simulation; e.g., imagine you are an electron travelling from a power station to your home – what do you see and do?
  • Encourage pupils to think like young scientists: "What questions about electricity do you have?" – document these for later exploration.

This structured yet dynamic lesson balances foundational knowledge with active exploration, setting pupils on an exciting journey through electric energy in an age-appropriate and curriculum-aligned way.

Create Your Own AI Lesson Plan

Join thousands of teachers using Kuraplan AI to create personalized lesson plans that align with Aligned with the NCCA Primary Curriculum, Junior Cycle & Senior Cycle (Leaving Cert) specifications in minutes, not hours.

AI-powered lesson creation
Curriculum-aligned content
Ready in minutes

Created with Kuraplan AI

🌟 Trusted by 1000+ Schools

Join educators across Ireland