Conducting Electricity

Contributor: Elephango Editors. Lesson ID: 12689

You've heard of train conductors, but have you ever heard of conductors of electricity? Does he take tickets from electrons to let them ride the wires? Not exactly, but conductors do allow them to go!

categories

Physical Science

subject
Science
learning style
Visual
personality style
Golden Retriever
Grade Level
Primary (K-2), Intermediate (3-5)
Lesson Type
Quick Query

Lesson Plan - Get It!

Audio: Image - Button Play
Image - Lession Started Image - Button Start
  • How fast can you run?
  • How fast does your car or bicycle go?
  • Can you go 186,000 miles in a second?
  • Did you know electricity can travel at more than 186,000 miles per second?

That's 669,600,000 miles per hour!

Think about this: If you were to drive 40 MPH in a car, electricity would be traveling about 16,740,000 times faster than you! And through little tiny wires as well! Read on!

Every day, we are using electricity in one way or another.

Every minute, we are using electricity to power devices and appliances such as vacuums, refrigerators, ovens, blenders, and television sets that we use constantly in our lives.

It would seem almost impossible to count the number of times you have used electricity so far today. Electricity is needed to power most things that are found in our homes.

  • Have you ever thought about how electricity can travel from one place to another?

It needs to flow through an object that is known as a good conductor of electricity, something that lets electricity flow through it. If electricity cannot flow throw something, it's called an insulator.

All metals are conductors. Glass, wood, rubber, and plastic are insulators. Some liquids, such as salt water, are conductors; while others, like oil, are insulators.

Check out the conductors and insulators in the image below:

conductors and insulators

  • Have you ever noticed the electric wires that run into your home?
  • Do you think they're good conductors?
  • Have you ever wondered why the birds that sit on them don't get electrocuted?

To find out, watch Why don't Birds get Electrocuted on Power Cables? from It's AumSum Time:

Image - Video

Continue on to the Got It? section to experiment further with electricity!

Image - Button Next