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Physics / Electricity and Magnetism

Circuitry At Home

Explore Circuitry At Home as an interactive EJS simulation for electricity and magnetism.

Circuitry At Home preview image

1. Watch or Launch

Teacher Demonstration

Use the live model as a shared screen demonstration before students try their own predictions and observations.

Launch the Interactive

Open the simulation, adjust the controls, and compare what changes on screen before answering the concept-check questions.

Launch Interactive

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2. Big Ideas

Key idea DC-circuit interactives make voltage, current, resistance, and power visible. The useful learning move is to connect the circuit connection and meter readings to Ohm's law and energy transfer.

What Students Can Learn

  • Read voltage, current, and resistance as separate quantities.
  • Use Ohm's law to compare one changed setting at a time.
  • Check whether components are connected in series, parallel, or a simpler single-branch circuit.
  • Relate current and voltage to power or brightness where shown.

Guiding Question

How do the circuit connection and meter readings explain the change in current, voltage, resistance, or power?

3. Try the Investigation

Trace the Circuit

Find the supply, component, switch, and current path before changing values.

Read the Meters

Record voltage and current readings with units.

Change One Quantity

Alter voltage or resistance while keeping the other setting clear.

Explain with Ohm's Law

Use V, I, and R to explain the observed change.

4. Teacher Notes

Lesson Use

Use this as a quantitative evidence task. Ask students to quote a meter reading before making an Ohm's law claim.

Discussion Prompts

Ask: Which quantity changed? Which quantity was held fixed? How do the readings support V = IR?

Teaching Moves

Use paired cases with only one changed value, then ask students to predict the next reading before checking the model.

5. Concept Check

These questions are generated from the topic and the concept illustrated by the simulation. Use them after students have explored the model.

Concept Score

Correct first attempts build a streak and unlock higher point multipliers on this device.

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Answer each question once to build your streak.

1. In an Ohm's law or resistor interactive, what should students compare?

2. For the same potential difference, what happens when resistance increases?

3. What does a straight-line V-I graph through the origin suggest for a resistor?

4. What evidence should be cited when a variable resistor is changed?

5. What makes a DC-circuit conclusion strong?

Expert Challenge

Unlocks after 3 correct concept-check answers on this page.

Locked

1. In a circuit-builder or practical-electricity interactive, what should students do before explaining the result?

2. What feedback fits 'a bulb lights when only one side is connected to the battery'?

3. How should students interpret circuit symbols in a matching game?

4. What should students check in household-circuit or power pages?

5. What makes a practical-circuit answer expert-level?

7. Learning Pulse

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