Electric Current & Circuits
CTET recap: An electric cell is the source that pushes current; it has two terminals, a positive (+) and a negative (−). Joining two or more cells gives a battery. Current is the flow of charge through a path, and it will only flow when that path is a closed circuit — a complete, unbroken loop from one terminal of the cell, through the wires and the bulb, and back to the other terminal. The instant there is a gap anywhere — the switch is off, a wire comes loose, the bulb's filament is broken (fused) — the circuit is open and no current flows, so the bulb does not glow. A switch is simply a device to make (close) or break (open) the circuit at will. Pedagogy & how it's tested: This topic is almost always tested through the failed-bulb scenario. A child connects everything but the bulb won't light, and you must identify that the circuit is open somewhere. The deeper pedagogy point CTET likes: at this level children should be taught with hands-on activity (actually building a circuit with a cell, wires, bulb and switch) and circuit diagrams introduced only after the real thing — concrete before abstract, in line with the upper-primary learner. Common misconceptions to flag: children think a single wire from one terminal is enough to light a bulb (they miss that a complete loop is needed); they think the cell 'stores' the bulb's light; and they assume a fresh-looking bulb must work even when its filament is broken. Teaching tip CTET rewards: let children predict, then test, then explain — error is diagnostic, not failure.
✅ Solved examples
✏️ Practice — try these, take hints as needed
📝 Topic test — 8 questions
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Key Concepts — Quick Reference
Circuits & conductors (the must-knows)
| Electric cell | Source of current; two terminals (+ and −); a battery = two or more cells joined |
|---|---|
| Closed circuit | A complete, unbroken loop — current flows and the bulb glows |
| Open circuit | A break/gap anywhere (switch off, loose wire, fused bulb) — no current |
| Conductor | Lets current pass: metals, especially copper; also the human body & tap water |
| Insulator | Blocks current: rubber, plastic, dry wood, glass, air |
Magnets (the must-knows)
| Two poles | Every magnet has exactly two poles — North and South; poles are inseparable |
|---|---|
| Pole rule | Like poles repel; unlike poles attract |
| Directive property | A freely suspended magnet rests in the North–South direction (basis of a compass) |
| Magnetic materials | Attracted by a magnet: iron, nickel, cobalt (and steel) |