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Online Secondary Physics Tutors

With First Tutors you can find an online Secondary Physics tutor. Online tutoring is an excellent way to improve confidence while improving grades.

First Tutors is the best place to find the the best online Secondary Physics tutors for your requirements, enabling you to find a private online Secondary Physics teacher for any subject ranging from primary through to university level. All of our teachers have been reference checked and have been through our ID verification process.

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  1. Savvas

    Online Physics Tutor
    I am an engineer working for an engineering consultancy firm in London. I have been told that my approach to teaching makes it enjoyable for my students as I am considered patient and very approachable. I teach students based on guiding them to find out the answers to problems on their own. It is sa...
  2. Blanca

    Online Physics Tuition
    As Biomedical Sciences graduate with 2 years in a BEng and now finishing an MSc in Molecular Biology, I would like to find new students and help them with everything I can. Throughout my career I was lucky enough to have a lot of different tutors which each taught me different visions on different s...
  3. Madeleine

    Online Physics Tuition
    I am a well motivated and enthusiastic person with 20 years teaching experience. I am considered to be friendly and approachable. I aim to help students reach their full potential and also offer advise and guidance to help support them. I believe in establishing a good rapport with my student, and t...
  4. Wai

    Private Online Physics Tutor
    I am a student at the University of Durham studying Computer Science. I play multiple sports like football, badminton and tennis. If I am not playing sports, I am on ProjectEuler, Sporcle, or GeoGuessr Personally, I use analogies and examples to get my point across. I often found this quite useful w...
  5. Nicola

    Online Tuition for Physics
    I am a practicing, fully qualified physics teacher registered with GTCS who is extremely passionate about my subject. My degree had a mix of physics and planetary sciences and was mainly focused on astrophysics, relativity and quantum mechanics with classical physics, astrobiology and some chemistry...
  6. Oliver

    Online Physics Lessons
    I am a full time professional maths and physics tutor and a former physics teacher at a London independent school. I have a 2:i in physics from University College London and after graduating I was awarded a scholarship by the Institute of Physics to train as a teacher. I have worked with hundreds...
  7. Claire

    Private Online Physics Tuition
    Hi I'm Claire, I am a Science teacher with 15 years experience teaching in schools. I have taught Combined Science, Biology, Chemistry and Physics all up to GCSE level and have experience teaching Edexcel, OCR and AQA exam boards. I have helped hundreds of students achieve their target grades or hig...
  8. Ian

    Online Physics Lessons
    I am a qualified teacher of Physics, teaching A level Physics at a local Independent Grammar School. I am passionate about my subject which is why I only tutor Physics even though I have experience teaching all three subjects at GCSE. This is where my real strengths lie and I am best able to support...
  9. Octavian
    Premium

    Online Physics Teacher
    Since 2009, I have been teaching Physics at the University of Oxford, where I also conduct research in Medical Physics, focusing on the mathematical optimization of radiotherapy for cancer treatment. I'm fluent in five languages—English, French, Italian, Romanian, and Spanish—and am currently advanc...
  10. Rafia
    Premium

    Online Physics Tutoring
    I am a qualified science and maths teacher also well organised and patient so that I can deliver the specific lesson plans of all my students. My well developed sense of humour is part due to my exposure to a variety of people. I feel that I have a good all round personality – able to lead and yet t...

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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!