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Push and Pull

Force: Push and Pull

Push and Pull

Push and Pull

What you'll learn

  • A push or a pull acting on an object is called a force.
  • A force can make a still object start moving.
  • A force can make a moving object stop or slow down.
  • A force can change the direction of a moving object, like hitting a ball with a bat.
  • A force can change the shape of an object, like pressing dough or squeezing a rubber ball.

Key concepts

Level 1 - Core idea

Verbal: Any push or pull acting on an object is called a force. A force can start motion, stop motion, speed it up, slow it down, change its direction, or change the shape of the object.

Symbolic: push (away from you) + pull (toward you) = force; force can change speed, direction, or shape

Visual: Watch a swing in a park: pushing it moves it away from you, and pulling the seat brings it toward you — both are forces.

Level 2 - Going deeper

Notice where you see this idea at home, at school, and in your neighbourhood — connecting the concept to daily life makes it easier to remember and use.

Level 3 - NCERT anchor

NCERT EVS Looking Around 4 — everyday activities like playing on swings, opening bags, and kicking balls show push and pull in daily life.

Worked example

You open your school bag's zip by pulling the zipper toward you. Is this a push or a pull, and what does the force do?

Step 1 - The zipper handle moves toward you.
Step 2 - Moving toward you is called a pull.
Step 3 - This pull force makes the zipper slide and open the bag.
Answer: It is a pull, and the force opens the zip by moving it.

A batsman hits a moving cricket ball and it changes direction. What does this show about force?

Step 1 - The ball was moving in one direction before being hit.
Step 2 - The bat applies a force on the ball.
Step 3 - After the hit, the ball moves in a new direction.
Answer: A force can change the direction of a moving object.

Common mistakes

MistakeWhy it happensFix
Force only means pushingStudents only recall one typeForce means push or pull, both count as force
Objects move on their own without any causeMotion is not linked to its causeEvery change in motion needs a push or a pull
Force can only stop objects, not start themFocusing on only one effectForce can start, stop, speed up, slow down, or turn an object
Squeezing a ball is not a forceShape change is not linked to forceSqueezing changes shape, which is also an effect of force

Quick check

  • What do we call a push or a pull acting on an object?
  • Name one activity where you use a pull.
  • Give an example where force changes the shape of an object.
  • How can a force change the direction of a rolling ball?
  • Stretch: Why does a gently pushed toy car travel less distance than a strongly pushed one?

Revision tip: Act out one push and one pull with your own hands before you answer questions on force.

Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Push and Pull.

Key Takeaways (TL;DR)

  • What you'll learn
  • Key concepts
  • Worked example
  • Common mistakes

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