Download presentation
1
Conductors and Insulators
Jeopardy Conductors and Insulators Magnets Vocabulary Circuits Potluck Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $200 Q $200 Q $200 Q $200 Q $200 Q $300 Q $300 Q $300 Q $300 Q $300 Q $400 Q $400 Q $400 Q $400 Q $400 Q $500 Q $500 Q $500 Q $500 Q $500 Final Jeopardy
2
$100 Question from Vocabulary
When positive and negative charges are no longer balanced, _____ occurs.
3
$100 Answer from Vocabulary
Static Electricity
4
$200 Question from Vocabulary
What is a flow of electric charges?
5
$200 Answer from Vocabulary
Electric current
6
$300 Question from Vocabulary
This does not allow electric charges to flow easily.
7
$300 Answer from Vocabulary
Resistance
8
$400 Question from Vocabulary
What is the path an electric current called?
9
$400 Answer from Vocabulary
Circuit
10
$500 Question from Vocabulary
What is the area around a magnet called?
11
$500 Answer from Vocabulary
Magnetic Field
12
$100 Question from Conductors and Insulators
What is the material called that electric current can pass through easily?
13
$100 Answer from Conductors and Insulators
14
$200 Question from Conductors and Insulators
What is an insulator?
15
$200 Answer from Conductors and Insulators
Material that electricity current can not pass through easily
16
$300 Question from Conductors and Insulators
What would copper wire do ina circuit?
17
$300 Answer from Conductors and Insulators
Conducts electricity
18
$400 Question from Conductors and Insulators
Which of the following would be a good conductor? wood cooper rubber plastic
19
$400 Answer from Conductors and Insulators
Copper
20
$500 Question from Conductors and Insulators
What distinguishes a conductor from an insulator?
21
$500 Answer from Conductors and Insulators
A conductor is metal and allows electricity to flow through it. An insulators is not metal and does not allow electricity to flow through it.
22
$100 Question from Magnet What are the ends of a magnet called?
23
$100 Answer from Magnet Magnetic poles
24
$200 Question from Magnet Magnets attract each other where?
25
$200 Answer from Magnet At opposite poles
26
$300 Question from Magnet Where is a bar magnet’s pull the strongest?
27
$300 Answer from Magnet At both poles
28
$400 Question from Magnet How do two objects that have both
positive charges act?
29
$400 Answer from Magnet They repel each other.
30
$500 Question from Magnet What is an object that attracts things
made of iron or steel called?
31
$500 Answer from Magnet magnet
32
$100 Question from Circuits
Electricity flows when a switch is (open/closed).
33
$100 Answer from Circuits Closed
34
$200 Question from Circuits
What is a circuit with one path for electric current called?
35
$200 Answer from Circuits Series Circuit
36
$300 Question from Circuits
What is a circuit with more than One path for electric current called?
37
$300 Answer from Circuits Parallel Circuits
38
$400 Question from Circuits
What type of circuits are in our schools?
39
$400 Answer from Circuits Parallel
40
$500 Question from Circuits
What three things must be used to have a complete circuit?
41
$500 Answer from Circuits A pathway, an energy source, and a receiver
42
$100 Question from Potluck
What charge does an object have if it has more negative particles than positive particles?
43
$100 Answer from Potluck Negative charge
44
$200 Question from Potluck
What is a charge that stays on an object called?
45
$200 Answer from Potluck Static Electricity
46
$300 Question from Potluck
What is an example of static electricity?
47
$300 Answer from Potluck Lightening, shuffling feet, or
balloons sticking.
48
$400 Question from Potluck
What is the charge of electrons?
49
$400 Answer from Potluck Negative Charge
50
$500 Question from Potluck
What word is similar to circuit and helps us to understand how a circuit works?
51
$500 Answer from Potluck Circle
52
Final Jeopardy What is the main difference between a bar
magnet and an electromagnet?
53
Final Jeopardy Answer A bar magnet can’t be switched
on and off. An electromagnet is temporary. It can be switched on and off.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.