Exam-style question
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A student makes a mistake while revising Apply Ohm S Law To Suitable Conductors. Which correction is most accurate?.
- A.A. The correction is to keep apply ohm's law to suitable conductors separate from the common neighbouring idea in Current electricity, then explain the tested distinction.
- B.B. The mistake is harmless because the two ideas always mean the same thing.
- C.C. The correction is to memorise the wording without explaining the distinction.
- D.D. The answer should move to a different Current electricity topic instead of fixing the misconception.
Model answer
What a good answer should say
- Signal Path answer 75f002: A.
- The correction is to keep apply ohm's law to suitable conductors separate from the common neighbouring idea in Current electricity, then explain the tested distinction.
- is correct because it matches Apply Ohm's law to suitable conductors.
- through charge flow, potential difference, Ohm law, resistivity.
Explanation
Why this works
The stem says: A student makes a mistake while revising Apply Ohm S Law To Suitable Conductors. Which correction is most accurate?
Answer route: apply-ohm-s-law-to-suitable-conductors-mcq-2. Option or response evidence: A A.
| B B. The mistake is harmless because the two ideas always mean the same thing.
| C C. The correction is to memorise the wording without explaining the distinction.
| D D. The answer should move to a different Current electricity topic instead of fixing the misconception..
Practice-context vocabulary for this exact item: deduction, significant, ruler, wire, thermistor, capacitance, slope, control, scalar, resolution, diode, separation, radial, equipotential, substitute, divider, fieldline, uniform, calibration, rearrange, zero, junction, coulomb, vector, magnitude, constant, uncertainty, assumption, direction, ldr, orbit, tangent, component, filament. Use these terms only to keep the reasoning tied to the page-specific circuit or field situation.
The final response must match the stated quantity, unit, graph evidence and physical model rather than a neighbouring question with similar wording.
Common mistake
No common mistake is linked to this question yet.
