I have used electric multi-meter for many year (perhaps since I was a junior high school student)
This is the first time I buy and use a clamp meter.
Figure 1 Got the batteries installed
Figure 2 A electric heater (1200 W) was connected to a self-made extension cord (I made it two years ago). The cord was consisted with two strains of wires (the hot and ground wires), and I separated them. Clamped one strain of the cord and measured the AC current.
Figure 3 Yes! the cute palms with red sleeves were my boy's hands!
After measuring, I confirmed that the heater was not always running with the maximum output (every night, we could hear "click" sounds from the heater ever 10 -20 seconds, and my wife thought that really noisy in the night).
From the clamp meter, I also the current changed from 8.5 - 9.0 A to 0.2 A about every 10 sec. This is the noise come from.
I just guess that the switching sound is using a thermo-switch to prevent the device overheating.
In addition, I think the life skills are more important than any grades of subjects in the school. Thus I taught my child how to measure AC current, even he did not know what was he doing!
References
Fluke AC/DC clamp meter manual (in PDF)
Electrical wiring in North America - Wikipedia