Moving Things, People & Ideas (VI–VIII)
This is one of the friendliest chapters in CTET Paper II Science — the physics is school-level, but the questions reward a teacher who has actually watched children push, pull and time things. The NCERT trio of 'Motion and Measurement of Distances' (Class 6), 'Force and Pressure' and 'Friction' (Class 8) shows up as a mix of straight recall (types of motion, what a force can do), one-step computation (speed = distance ÷ time, pressure = force ÷ area), and pedagogy (children's stubborn misconceptions, activity-based teaching, the difference between rote definitions and understanding). I tell trainee teachers the same thing every time: kids do not arrive as blank slates here. A Class 7 child will swear that 'a moving ball stops because the force inside it runs out' — and the CTET item is built precisely around spotting and correcting that idea. Get the three formulas right, keep the units honest, and know the classic misconceptions, and this chapter is a scoring banker.
Topics
⚡ Smart tips & memory hooks
Memory hooks and exam-smart tips to lock this chapter in and answer CTET MCQs quickly and accurately.
- The three formulas, one breath: Speed = Distance ÷ Time ; Pressure = Force ÷ Area ; Friction opposes motion. Get the division order right and half the section is yours.
- Unit flip: m/s → km/h multiply by 3.6 ; km/h → m/s multiply by 5/18. A cyclist at 10 m/s = 36 km/h.
- Five effects of a force (Start, Stop, Speed up/Slow down, change Direction, change Shape) — scan the scenario for which one changed.
- Smaller area = bigger pressure: knife edges, nails, needles (cut/pierce) vs broad straps, wide foundations, camel feet (spread load).
- Friction strength ladder: Static > Sliding > Rolling. Hardest to START moving, easiest to ROLL.
- Reduce friction → lubricants, polishing, ball bearings, streamlining. Increase friction → treads, grooves, rough soles.
⚠️ Common mistakes & traps
CTET loves to test these exact confusions. Internalise each trap before exam day.
- Inverting the speed formula — it is Distance ÷ Time, never Time ÷ Distance. Check the unit reads m/s or km/h.
- Forgetting to convert minutes to hours (30 min = 0.5 h) before using speed = distance ÷ time.
- Treating force and pressure as the same — pressure is force PER unit area (smaller area, more pressure for the same force).
- Saying rolling friction is the largest — it is the smallest; static friction is the largest.
- Believing a moving object stops because its "internal force runs out" — it stops because friction (an external force) opposes it.
- Calling friction "always harmful" — it is essential for walking, writing, gripping and braking; it is both friend and foe.
📈 CTET exam insight & PYQ analysis
🎴 Flashcards — instant recall
Tap a card to reveal the answer. Drill these until they are automatic.
📌 Quick revision
Chapter test
📚 Want the full concept lesson?
This chapter gives you the CTET-focused recap, pedagogy and exam-style practice. For the underlying concept taught step by step — worked from the ground up with diagrams — open the matching lesson in our school Maths course.
🏆 Vidaara CTET success checklist
You have truly mastered Moving Things, People & Ideas (VI–VIII) when you can tick every box below.
- Recall every formula in this chapter without looking them up
- Solve each topic’s practice set with at least 80% accuracy
- Use the chapter shortcuts to cut your solving time in half
- Spot and avoid every common trap listed above
- Score 80%+ on the timed chapter test
📋 Chapter mastery scorecard
Track where you stand. Aim for the target before moving to the next chapter.
| Skill checkpoint | Target |
|---|---|
| Concept theory & formulas understood | 100% |
| Topic practice sets attempted (3 topics) | 3/3 |
| Best topic-test score | — → 80%+ |
| Chapter test score | — → 80%+ |
| Flashcards drilled to instant recall | 12 cards |
Key Concepts — Quick Reference
Motion & Speed
| Speed | Speed = Distance ÷ Time (SI unit: m/s; also km/h) |
|---|---|
| Distance | Distance = Speed × Time |
| Time | Time = Distance ÷ Speed |
| Unit conversion | 1 m/s = 3.6 km/h ; 1 km/h = (5/18) m/s |
Force, Pressure & Friction
| Net force (same line) | Same direction → add ; opposite directions → subtract |
|---|---|
| Pressure | Pressure = Force ÷ Area (SI unit: pascal, Pa = N/m²) |
| Pressure rule | Smaller area → larger pressure for the same force |
| Friction | Always opposes motion ; static > sliding > rolling friction |