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P4 Science · Human Body Systems

Human Digestive System P4 Science: Notes, Labelled Diagram & PSLE Questions

Learn every organ, its function, and how food is broken down and absorbed — with model PSLE answers and key exam vocabulary.

Human Digestive System P4 Science: Notes, Labelled Diagram & PSLE Questions

📅 Updated May 2026 · Aligned to MOE 2026 syllabus

You eat food every day, but have you ever thought about the remarkable journey that food makes through your body? From the moment you take your first bite to the moment waste leaves your body, food travels through a 9-metre-long tube and is processed by multiple organs, each with a specific role. This is the digestive system, and understanding it is a key component of P4 Science and PSLE biology.

What Is Digestion? P4 Science Definition & Key Terms

🎬 Journey of Food Through the Digestive System
😊 Stomach Small Intestine Nutrients absorbed Large Intestine Water absorbed Liver Pancreas ① Mouth Teeth chew food; saliva starts digestion ② Oesophagus Pushes food to stomach ③ Stomach Acid breaks food down ④ Small Intestine Nutrients → bloodstream ⑤ Large Intestine Water absorbed; waste out

Food travels from mouth → oesophagus → stomach → small intestine → large intestine. Nutrients are absorbed in the small intestine.

Digestion is the process of breaking down large, complex food molecules into small, simple molecules that can pass through the walls of the digestive system into the bloodstream. Once in the blood, these nutrients are transported to every cell in the body to provide energy, support growth, and repair tissues.

There are two types of digestion:

Journey of Food Through the Body — Organ by Organ Notes & Diagram

Food travels through the digestive system in a specific order. Each organ has a unique structure and function:

1. The Mouth

Digestion begins in the mouth with both mechanical and chemical digestion happening simultaneously.

2. The Oesophagus (Gullet)

The oesophagus is a muscular tube about 25 cm long that connects the mouth to the stomach. Food moves through it by rhythmic muscular contractions called peristalsis — waves of muscle squeezing food downward. No digestion occurs in the oesophagus; it is purely a transport tube. Peristalsis is so effective that you can swallow food even when upside down.

3. The Stomach

The stomach is a muscular, J-shaped bag that stores food and continues digestion:

4. The Small Intestine

Despite being called "small" (referring to its narrow diameter of about 3 cm), the small intestine is about 6–7 metres long — by far the longest part of the digestive system. It is where most chemical digestion is completed and almost all absorption of nutrients occurs.

5. The Large Intestine

The large intestine (colon) is about 1.5 metres long and wider than the small intestine. Its main functions are:

6. The Rectum and Anus

The rectum is the final section of the large intestine, where faeces are stored. The anus is the opening through which faeces leave the body during defecation. Two ring-like muscles (sphincters) control this opening — one involuntary (always closed unless defecation occurs) and one voluntary (under conscious control).

The Role of the Liver in Digestion — P4 & PSLE Notes

The liver is the largest internal organ and has over 500 functions. For P4 Science, the key roles are:

Digestive Enzymes — What They Break Down & PSLE Questions

EnzymeWhere ProducedFood Type DigestedProducts
AmylaseSalivary glands, pancreasStarch (carbohydrate)Maltose, then glucose
PepsinStomachProteinsPeptides (shorter protein chains)
ProteasePancreasProteins and peptidesAmino acids
LipasePancreasFats (lipids)Fatty acids + glycerol

⚠️ Common Exam Traps

Trap 1: "Bile is an enzyme." — WRONG. Bile is NOT an enzyme. It is a substance that emulsifies (physically breaks up) fats to increase their surface area, but it does not chemically digest them. Lipase is the enzyme that digests fat.

Trap 2: "The small intestine only absorbs water." — WRONG. The LARGE intestine mainly absorbs water. The SMALL intestine absorbs glucose, amino acids, fatty acids, vitamins, and minerals.

Trap 3: "Digestion begins in the stomach." — WRONG. Digestion begins in the MOUTH, where amylase in saliva begins digesting starch and teeth mechanically break down food.

Dietary Fibre — Why It Matters & Common Exam Questions

Dietary fibre (also called roughage) is the indigestible part of plant foods — the cellulose cell walls of vegetables, fruits, and whole grains. Although fibre cannot be digested and absorbed, it is essential for digestive health:

In Singapore's context, traditional Asian diets — high in vegetables, fruits, and whole grains like brown rice and oats — naturally provide good fibre intake. The shift toward more processed, low-fibre foods is associated with higher rates of constipation and digestive disorders.

PSLE Digestive System Exam Questions — Worked Model Answers

PSLE questions often present a scenario — a person has a damaged liver, or a blocked bile duct, or their pancreas is not producing enzymes — and ask what problem would result. Here is how to answer these:

📋 Key Facts Summary

  • Digestion: mechanical (physical) + chemical (enzymes)
  • Order: Mouth → Oesophagus → Stomach → Small intestine → Large intestine → Rectum → Anus
  • Mouth: amylase digests starch; teeth for mechanical digestion
  • Stomach: acid + pepsin digests protein; churning provides mechanical digestion
  • Small intestine: final digestion + absorption of all nutrients via villi
  • Large intestine: absorbs water; forms and stores faeces
  • Liver: makes bile (emulsifies fat); regulates blood glucose; detoxification
  • Bile is NOT an enzyme; it emulsifies fat to increase surface area for lipase

Ready to test yourself? Try the quiz →

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🧠 Key Points to Remember
  • Path of food: Mouth → Oesophagus → Stomach → Small intestine → Large intestine
  • Mechanical digestion: teeth (mouth) and stomach muscles break food into smaller pieces
  • Chemical digestion: enzymes break food into nutrients that can be absorbed
  • Liver produces bile, which emulsifies fats; bile is stored in the gall bladder
  • Villi in the small intestine increase surface area for nutrient absorption
  • Large intestine absorbs water; remaining solid waste is excreted as faeces
📝

Practice Questions

📝 Practice Question 1
Trace the path of food through the human digestive system from the mouth to the large intestine.
(3 marks)
▼ Show Answer
✅ Food enters the mouth (mechanical digestion by teeth and chemical digestion by saliva) → travels down the oesophagus → enters the stomach (further mechanical and chemical digestion) → passes into the small intestine (nutrients absorbed into the bloodstream) → enters the large intestine (water absorbed, undigested food formed into faeces).
📝 Practice Question 2
Explain why a person who has had their gall bladder removed may have difficulty digesting fatty foods.
(2 marks)
▼ Show Answer
✅ The gall bladder stores bile produced by the liver. Bile helps to break down (emulsify) fats into smaller droplets so they can be digested more easily. Without the gall bladder, bile cannot be stored and released in large amounts when fatty food arrives, making fat digestion less efficient.
📝 Practice Question 3
A person eats a meal containing starch. Describe where and how starch is digested.
(2 marks)
▼ Show Answer
✅ Starch digestion begins in the mouth, where salivary amylase (an enzyme in saliva) breaks down starch into simpler sugars. Digestion continues and is completed in the small intestine, where pancreatic amylase further breaks down any remaining starch into glucose for absorption.
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