Stephen Elliott electric current is the flow of electrons in a conductor. Voltage is basically how hard those electrons are being pushed down that conductor. The number of electrons per second going past a specific point is the current which is measure in amperes. Think of it like water pressure. If you use the "standard" analogy of water flow, amp's are like gallons per minute. With more water pressure (voltage), you get more gallons per minute (amps) going past a point.
Hope that explains it a bit. Good place to start learning would be [https://learn.sparkfun.com/tutorials/voltage-current-resistance-and-ohms-law|right here]