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P4 / P5 · Forces & Motion

Forces & Motion P4/P5 PSLE Science: Notes, Questions & Free Quiz

Master contact and non-contact forces, the effects of forces, friction, gravity, and spring force — with model answers for every exam question type.

Forces & Motion P4/P5 PSLE Science: Notes, Questions & Free Quiz

📅 Updated May 2026 · Aligned to MOE 2026 syllabus

Forces are pushes or pulls that act on objects. In Singapore Primary Science, understanding forces is essential because the topic appears across P4 and P5, and is heavily tested at PSLE. You need to be able to identify types of forces, describe their effects on objects, and explain everyday situations involving forces — including why objects move, stop, change direction, or change shape.

What Is a Force? PSLE Definition, Units & Key Concepts

A force is a push or a pull. Forces can cause objects to start moving, stop moving, speed up, slow down, change direction, or change shape. Forces are measured in Newtons (N) using an instrument called a force meter (or spring balance).

A key concept for PSLE: forces always act between two objects. You cannot have a force without something exerting it and something receiving it.

Contact vs Non-Contact Forces — P4 Notes & PSLE Questions

The most important classification for PSLE is whether a force requires physical contact between two objects.

TypeContact Needed?Examples
FrictionYesBrakes on a bicycle, erasing with a rubber
Spring ForceYesCompressed spring pushing back, stretched elastic
Gravitational ForceNoObjects falling, the Moon orbiting the Earth
Magnetic ForceNoMagnets attracting iron nails across a gap

Gravitational Force (Gravity) — P4/P5 Notes & PSLE Questions

Gravity is a non-contact force that pulls objects towards each other. On Earth, gravity pulls everything downward towards the Earth's centre. This is why objects fall when dropped. The gravitational force acting on an object is called its weight.

Weight is different from mass. Mass is the amount of matter in an object and does not change wherever you are. Weight is the gravitational force on that mass and changes depending on location — an astronaut on the Moon weighs less because the Moon's gravity is weaker, but their mass stays the same.

⚠ Common PSLE Mistake

Students often write "the force of gravity makes the object heavier." This is incorrect. Gravity causes the object to have weight and to fall — it does not change the object's mass. Write: "Gravitational force pulls the object downward" or "gravity acts on the object, causing it to fall."

Friction — Types, Advantages, Disadvantages & PSLE Questions

Friction is a contact force that acts between two surfaces in contact. It always opposes motion — meaning it acts in the direction opposite to movement. Friction can be useful or unhelpful depending on the situation.

When Friction Is Useful

When Friction Is Not Useful

Factors That Affect Friction

Ways to Reduce Friction

Spring Force (Elastic Force) — P4 Notes & Exam Questions

When a spring (or elastic material) is stretched or compressed, it exerts a force to return to its original shape. This is the spring force. A force meter uses a spring — when a weight pulls down on the spring, it stretches, and the scale shows how large the force is.

4 Effects of Forces — PSLE Notes, Examples & Questions

For PSLE, you must be able to state clearly what forces can do to objects. There are four key effects:

⚠ PSLE Open-Ended Tip

When asked "What is the effect of the force on the object?", always state both what force is acting AND what it causes. For example: "The frictional force acting between the brakes and the wheel rim slows down the wheel and brings the bicycle to a stop." Vague answers like "friction stops the bicycle" may not earn full marks.

Balanced vs Unbalanced Forces — PSLE Notes & Model Answers

When two or more forces act on an object, their combined effect determines whether the object moves or stays still.

Balanced forces are equal in size and opposite in direction. An object with balanced forces acting on it stays still (if stationary) or continues moving at the same speed in the same direction. For example, a book resting on a table has gravity pulling it down and the table exerting an equal upward force — the forces are balanced.

Unbalanced forces are forces where one direction is stronger. The object will move in the direction of the stronger force, or accelerate. For example, if you push a box with 10 N but friction opposes it with only 6 N, the net force is 4 N in your direction, so the box moves.

PSLE Forces & Motion Exam Questions — Worked Model Answers

Question: A book is lying still on a table. What can you say about the forces acting on the book?

Model Answer: The forces acting on the book are balanced. Gravity acts downward on the book, and the table exerts an equal upward force (normal force) on the book. Since the forces are equal and opposite, the book remains stationary.

Question: Explain why a parachutist eventually falls at a constant speed after jumping from a plane.

Model Answer: When the parachutist first jumps, gravity pulls them downward faster than air resistance acts upward, so they accelerate. As their speed increases, air resistance also increases. Eventually, air resistance equals the gravitational force. At this point, the forces are balanced and the parachutist falls at a constant speed.

📋 Key Facts Summary

  • A force is a push or pull measured in Newtons (N)
  • Contact forces: friction, spring force — require physical contact
  • Non-contact forces: gravity, magnetic force — act across a distance
  • Four effects of forces: start, stop, change direction, change shape
  • Friction opposes motion; it always acts in the opposite direction to movement
  • Weight = gravitational force on an object; mass ≠ weight
  • Balanced forces → object stays still or moves at constant speed
  • Unbalanced forces → object moves in the direction of the stronger force

Ready to test yourself? Try the P4 quiz →

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🧠 Key Points to Remember
  • Force is a push or pull that can change an object's speed, direction, or shape
  • Contact forces (friction, spring force) require physical contact; non-contact forces (gravity, magnetic) do not
  • Gravity always pulls objects towards Earth's centre
  • Friction opposes motion; it can be useful (grip) or unhelpful (wear and heat)
  • Balanced forces = no change in motion (object stays still or moves at constant speed)
  • Unbalanced forces = acceleration — the object speeds up, slows down, or changes direction
  • Effects of force: change shape, change speed, change direction, start/stop movement
📝

Practice Questions

📝 Practice Question 1
A box is at rest on a table. State the two forces acting on the box and explain why it does not move.
(2 marks)
▼ Show Answer
✅ The two forces are: (1) Gravity (weight) pulling the box downward, and (2) the Normal force (reaction force from the table) pushing the box upward. The box does not move because these two forces are equal in size and opposite in direction — they are balanced forces, resulting in no change in motion.
📝 Practice Question 2
A student rubs his hands together quickly. His hands feel warm. Explain why.
(2 marks)
▼ Show Answer
✅ When the student rubs his hands together, friction acts between the surfaces of the two hands. Friction is a force that opposes motion. The work done against friction is converted into heat energy, which makes the hands feel warm.
📝 Practice Question 3
Give one advantage and one disadvantage of friction in everyday life.
(2 marks)
▼ Show Answer
✅ Advantage: Friction between shoe soles and the ground prevents us from slipping when we walk. Disadvantage: Friction between moving parts in a machine generates heat and causes the parts to wear down over time, reducing the machine's efficiency.
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Forces & Motion PSLE Exam Technique — How to Score Full Marks

Forces questions always reward students who work methodically. Before writing a single word, identify every force acting on the object in the scenario — name it, state its direction, and note whether it is contact or non-contact. Then compare the forces: are they balanced (equal and opposite) or unbalanced? Balanced forces mean no change in motion. Unbalanced forces mean the object will accelerate, decelerate, or change direction. Writing this analysis out, even briefly, prevents the most common forces error: concluding that a moving object must have unbalanced forces, when it might be moving at constant speed with balanced forces.

The elastic spring force is new in P5 and often underrevised. The core idea is simple: a spring exerts a force when compressed or stretched, and that force always acts in the direction that would return the spring to its natural shape. Compress a spring down — it pushes up. Stretch a spring to the right — it pulls back to the left. This restoring direction is the key feature of elastic spring force and the most common question about it.

Questions students ask

Can something be moving and still have balanced forces?

Yes — and this is one of the most commonly misunderstood ideas in forces. A cyclist at constant speed on a flat road has balanced forces: pedalling force equals friction and air resistance. Because the net force is zero, the cyclist neither speeds up nor slows down. Balanced forces mean no change in motion — not necessarily that the object is stationary.

Is friction always harmful?

No. Friction is useful when we need grip or control: it lets us walk without slipping, allows brakes to slow a car, lets a pen write on paper. It is harmful when it causes unwanted wear and heat: engine parts wear down due to friction, and wheels experience rolling resistance. The exam often asks for one useful and one harmful example — always be specific rather than vague.