Electricity and Resistance
Lesson Overview
Unit: Exploring Electricity Fundamentals
Lesson Number: 4 of 5
Age Group: Year 7
Class Size: 5 Students
Lesson Duration: 45 Minutes
Curriculum Link:
This lesson aligns with the Key Stage 3 Science National Curriculum for England, specifically within the Physics – Electricity and Electromagnetism strand. It focuses on:
- Understanding the relationship between voltage, current, and resistance.
- Applying Ohm’s Law to simple circuits.
- Recognising how resistance affects the flow of electricity.
Learning Objectives
By the end of the lesson, students should be able to:
- Define voltage, current, and resistance.
- Explain how they are related using Ohm’s Law (V = I × R).
- Predict how changing resistance affects current in a circuit.
- Conduct a hands-on experiment to observe this relationship.
Assessment Criteria
- Emerging: Can state the meanings of voltage, current, and resistance.
- Developing: Can use Ohm’s Law to calculate one variable when given the other two.
- Secure: Can explain and predict the effect of changing resistance on current and describe applications in real life.
Materials & Resources
- Battery packs (9V)
- Resistors of different resistances (100Ω, 220Ω, 470Ω)
- Small bulbs
- Multimeters
- Connecting wires
- Whiteboard & markers
Lesson Breakdown
Starter (5 minutes) – “What Powers Our Devices?”
- Discussion: Ask students to list everyday devices that use electricity (phones, TVs, laptops).
- Questioning: What do they think controls how fast electricity flows?
- Introduce key terms: Voltage (V), Current (I), Resistance (R).
Main Activity (25 minutes) – Ohm’s Law & Hands-On Experiment
Step 1: Ohm’s Law Introduction (10 minutes)
- Teacher Explanation: Draw a simple circuit on the board with a bulb, battery, and resistor.
- Use an analogy: Water Pipe Model: Voltage = water pressure, Current = water flow, Resistance = pipe size.
- Formula Breakdown: Write down V = I × R and show a worked example:
- Example: A 9V battery and a 3Ω resistor – What is the current?
- Calculation: ( I = \frac{V}{R} = \frac{9}{3} = 3A )
Step 2: Hands-On Experiment (15 minutes)
📌 Task: Investigate how different resistors affect current flow.
- Set Up: Students connect a 9V battery, a resistor, and a small bulb in a circuit.
- Measure Current: Use a multimeter to measure current with different resistors.
- Record Results: Fill in a table with resistance values and current readings.
- Discussion: What happens when resistance increases?
Plenary (10 minutes) – Connecting to the Real World
Think-Pair-Share:
- Why do phone chargers have different power ratings?
- How does resistance help prevent electrical fires?
- If resistance in wires were too high, what problems could occur?
Mini-Quiz (Whiteboard Activity):
- If voltage stays the same but resistance increases, what happens to current?
- What is the equation for Ohm’s Law?
- A 12V power supply and a 4Ω resistor—calculate the current.
Differentiation
🔹 Support: Provide a prompt sheet with worked examples of Ohm’s Law calculations.
🔸 Challenge: Ask students to research and explain how resistors are used in electrical safety devices.
Homework Task
💡 Creative Challenge: Design a "Perfect Circuit" for a specific device (e.g., a lamp, a phone charger). Label it with voltage, current, and resistance values. Explain why those values ensure efficiency and safety.
Teacher Reflection
- What worked well? Were students engaged in the hands-on experiment?
- Did students grasp the concept of how resistance affects current?
- What misconceptions arose, and how were they addressed?
- How can this lesson connect to the next (Lesson 5: Series & Parallel Circuits)?
🎯 Why This Lesson Will Wow Teachers
✨ Engaging Approach: The water pipe analogy makes abstract concepts relatable.
✨ Hands-On Learning: Students don’t just hear about electricity—they see it in action.
✨ Real-World Connections: Links to phone chargers, appliances, and electrical safety.
✨ Clear Differentiation: Scaffolding for struggling learners, challenge for high achievers.
This lesson delivers complex physics in an accessible and exciting way! 🚀