First Tutors is a service that helps you find a great tutor. Use the Search form below to find a match from thousands of quality tutors. For any support needed or questions, please refer to our Contact Us Page, we are happy to help. If you prefer to speak with an education advisor about a personalised tutor match, please call Varsity Tutors UK at 0203 962 1468, to connect with an education advisor.
If you prefer to speak with an education advisor about a personalised tutor match, please call Varsity Tutors UK at 0203 962 1468, to connect with an education advisor.

Online Secondary Physics Tutors

Use First Tutors to find an online Secondary Physics tutor. Online tutoring is an excellent way to boost confidence as well as improving grades.

First Tutors is the only place to find the top online Secondary Physics tutors for your needs, enabling you to find a private online Secondary Physics tutor for any subject ranging from primary through to university level. All of our teachers have been reference checked and have been through our ID approval process.

Reference checking
ID checking
7 days a week support
60,000+ tutors across the UK
  1. Sagarika

    Online Physics Tutor
    Enthusiastic, hardworking, passionate and committed Mathematics and Physics tutor with strong communication skills and years of experience in private tutoring, demonstrating excellent leadership, organisation and planning skills and also exemplifying innate understanding of how to teach children who...
  2. Simon

    Online Physics Tuition
    I am a professional school teacher of Mathematics and Physics. PhD and BSc (Honours) degrees in Physics from University of Exeter. Specialist teacher of GCSE Mathematics, with particular expertise in helping students reach their full potential in GCSE exams. Please note: I am now at full capacity f...
  3. Azhar

    Online Physics Tuition
    I have been teaching Mathematics for 20 years. In my experience of teaching Mathematics, I have generally seen pupils dreading this subject. This subject is generally regarded as a subject involving dry concepts, arduous calculations and somewhat baseless assumptions. The reason for such a wrong per...
  4. Benjamin

    Private Online Physics Tutor
    I have 12+ years of experience teaching in person and online. I have a 1st class Masters degree in Theoretical Physics (York, 2015), a PhD in Theoretical Plasma Physics (Warwick, 2019), 6+ years as an academic physicist, and soon a degree in Medicine (Oxford, 2029). For the past 6 years I have work...
  5. Raj

    Online Tuition for Physics
    I am an experienced and professional scientist. I have taught and tutored students for more than 27 years. Teaching is a truly enjoyable and rewarding experience for me. I have excellent interpersonal and communication skills. My approach to tuition is to tailor it to the needs of the student. I use...
  6. Jacob

    Online Physics Lessons
    I am a fully qualified teacher and a friendly, compassionate tutor with a passion for science and mathematics. I enjoy helping students increase their confidence in the subject, using a variety of teaching strategies. **I will be taking a break over the summer holidays and resuming in September....
  7. Isabella

    Private Online Physics Tuition
    I'm a fourth year medical student at Imperial College London. I completed my A-levels at Westminster School, gaining 5 A* in Math, Biology, Chemistry, Physics and Electronics. I also did the UCAT and BMAT for entry into medical school, achieving 3180 in UCAT (99th percentile) and 6.8 in the BMAT wit...
  8. Chelsey

    Online Physics Lessons
    I am an experienced teacher, tutor and AQA Examiner, currently employed at an `Outstanding` school in Buckinghamshire with 12 years experience. I hold a PGCE in Secondary Sciences from the world number 1 Institute of Education (UCL), and a 1st Class Honours degree in Biomedical Science. I also have...
  9. Sam

    Online Physics Teacher
    Hi! My name is Sam and I recently graduated from the University of Cambridge with a first class MEng, specialising in Electrical & Electronic, Systems and Control Engineering (although I studied General Engineering for the first 2 years). I am 25 years old and originally from Sheffield, working in C...
  10. Henry

    Online Physics Tutoring
    I completed my Undergraduate degree at the University of Cambridge reading Mathematics a few years ago and have been teaching since. I achieved A*s in my Maths, Further Maths, Physics and Chemistry A Levels at a leading state grammar school and achieved 13 A*s at GCSE. Students learn best from someo...

By typing your postcode into our easy to use search tool at the top of the page we will find you a secondary physics tutor that matches your needs. You will then be able to look through our list of secondary physics tutors close to your location and make a decision by reading through their detailed tutor profiles, their rates, qualifications and experience. You can also see what other parents or students have to say about the secondary physics tutors that fit your needs.

Sound wave

Are you a Secondary Physics tutor?

If you are a qualified secondary physics tutor looking to offer your tutoring services in secondary physics or any of our other subjects you can create your own unique tutoring profile easily. Simply register to fill in all your details or click here to find out more.

Fun Secondary Physics Experiment - Static Electricity

A fun way to discover about positively and negatively charged particles using basic household items. Is it true that opposites attract?

Things you will need:

  • Two blown-up balloons with string attached
  • An aluminium can
  • Some woollen fabric
  • Your hair

What to do:

  • First rub the two balloons one-by-one against the woollen fabric.
  • Then try moving the balloons together. Are they attracted to each other?
  • Rub one of the balloons against your hair then slowly pull it away (do this in front of a mirror so you can see what happens).
  • Put the aluminium can on it's side on a table. Rub the balloon on your hair again then hold the balloon close to the can and watch as it rolls towards it. Slowly move the balloon away from the can and it will follow.

What you will see:

  • By rubbing the balloons against the woollen fabric you have created static electricity. This involves negatively charged particles (which are called electrons) jumping to positively charged objects.
  • When you rub the balloons against the fabric or your hair they become negatively charged, they have taken some of the electrons from the fabric or hair and left them positively charged.
  • It thus appears to be true when we say opposites attract. Your positively charges hair is attracted to the negatively charged balloon and will rise up to meet it.
  • This is also the case with the aluminium can which is drawn to the negatively charged balloon as the area near it becomes positively charged.

Secondary Physics Joke

Q: What did the receiver say to the radio wave?

Secondary Physics Fact

If you hold up a grain of sand, the patch of sky it covers contains ~10,000 galaxies!