Welcome students, educators and parents to CeerazzleDazzlePhysics, the home outstanding GCSE and A Level Physics videos, 100% FREE for ALL learners from ALL backgrounds.
My name is Mr Ceeraz and I am am qualified Physics and Dance teacher with over 10 years of teaching experience at a London independent school. Since lockdown started, I have been making RU-vid videos to share my passion for Physics to support all students across the UK with their remote learning. Qualifications: I have a BSc degree in Mathematics and Physics from Kings College London, a Postgraduate Certificate in Education (PGCE) in Physics and Qualified Teacher Status (QTS)
My aim is to put the entire GCSE and A Level online for free to support as many students as possible. In my spare time, I am a professional breakdancer and compete nationally with a leading London crew. Visit my website for more information
Sir the question “ what is an electric field “ came up in this years gcse paper I said “ an electric field is a region in space in which a charged particle experiences a force “ and I didn’t get the mark
@@ceerazzledazzlephysics yeah it was AQA gcse physics triple paper 1 , i wrote the exact same definition as in the video, and i didnt get the mark, and its very annoying since im 2 marks off a grade 8
@ceerazzledazzlephysics For question 07.5 whenever I measure the line I get 8.1cm so if 1cm = 25N then the resultant force is 202.5 N. I really don't understand how the answer is 214N because that would mean the line is 8.56 cm long and whenever I measure I just don't get that number. Help please :(
It should be roughly that, are you sure that you have drawn the line correctly on the paper? Make sure you print this question out to do it as it is a scale diagram. Worst case scenario, you are quite close so you would only lose one mark overall
Many thank you for doing this for the students. Given the nation is grievously lacking Physics teachers, what you are doing is helping the nation and our next generation. Really appreciated it!
No, the horizontal component has to be going to the west. The vertical component is north wards This is because the resultant force is in the North-West direction.