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P3 Science · Diversity of Living Things

Living vs Non-Living Things P3 Science: Notes, MRS GREN, Questions & Free Quiz

Everything you need to know about MRS GREN, vertebrates, invertebrates, and classifying organisms — with model answers for every PSLE question type.

Living vs Non-Living Things P3 Science: Notes, MRS GREN, Questions & Free Quiz

📅 Updated May 2026 · Aligned to MOE 2026 syllabus

One of the first big questions in science is also one of the most fundamental: what makes something alive? This is not always as obvious as it sounds. Fire grows and moves — is it alive? A robot can walk and respond to its surroundings — is it alive? A dried seed looks completely lifeless — but is it? These are exactly the kinds of questions that appear in P3 Science exams, and getting them right requires a deep understanding of the seven characteristics of living things.

MRS GREN — 7 Characteristics of Living Things (P3 Notes & Quiz)

Scientists use a checklist of seven life processes to decide whether something is alive. Every single living thing — from the tiniest bacterium to a blue whale — must carry out all seven processes. The mnemonic MRS GREN helps you remember them:

3 Categories: Living, Non-Living & Once-Living — P3 Notes & Examples

In science, we divide everything in the world into three categories based on whether it is alive, has never been alive, or was once alive but has since died:

CategoryDefinitionExamples
LivingCurrently carrying out all MRS GREN processesA tree, a sleeping cat, a dormant seed, bacteria in soil, a mushroom growing on a log
Non-livingNever had life; cannot carry out any MRS GREN processRock, water, soil, glass, plastic, fire, clouds, a crystal, air, sand
Once-livingWas alive but has died; still made of organic materialDried leaf, wooden furniture, leather shoes, coal (compressed ancient plants), paper, cotton cloth, a dead insect

The once-living category is particularly important because many students forget it. A wooden table was once part of a living tree. Paper was once wood pulp from a living tree. Coal formed over millions of years from ancient plants and animals. These things are no longer alive, but they were once alive — and this matters for answering exam questions correctly.

P3 Living Things Exam Traps — Fire, Robots & Common Mistakes

These are the most frequently tested "trick" organisms that students get wrong:

Vertebrates vs Invertebrates — P3 Classification Notes & Questions

Animals can be divided into two major groups based on whether they have a backbone (vertebral column):

Vertebrates are animals with a backbone. There are five groups of vertebrates, which every P3 student must know:

GroupBody CoveringTemperatureReproductionExamples
FishScalesCold-bloodedLay eggs (in water)Salmon, clownfish, shark
AmphibiansMoist, smooth skinCold-bloodedLay eggs (in water)Frog, toad, salamander
ReptilesDry scalesCold-bloodedLay eggs (on land)Lizard, snake, crocodile, turtle
BirdsFeathersWarm-bloodedLay eggs (on land)Eagle, penguin, ostrich
MammalsFur/hairWarm-bloodedGive birth to live young (mostly)Dog, whale, bat, human

Key distinctions to remember: warm-blooded animals (birds and mammals) maintain a constant body temperature regardless of the environment. Cold-blooded animals (fish, amphibians, reptiles) have a body temperature that changes with the environment. Mammals feed their young with milk; no other group does this. Bats are the only flying mammals; whales and dolphins are mammals despite living in water.

Invertebrates are animals without a backbone. They make up about 97% of all animal species. Key groups include:

⚠️ Top Exam Traps

Trap 1: "A bat is a bird because it can fly." — WRONG. Bats are mammals: they have fur, give birth to live young, and feed their babies with milk. Flying does not make an animal a bird.

Trap 2: "A whale is a fish because it lives in the sea." — WRONG. Whales are mammals: they breathe air, are warm-blooded, give birth to live young, and feed their calves with milk.

Trap 3: "A spider is an insect." — WRONG. Spiders are arachnids (8 legs, 2 body parts). Insects have exactly 6 legs and 3 body parts.

📋 Key Facts Summary

  • MRS GREN: Movement, Respiration, Sensitivity, Growth, Reproduction, Excretion, Nutrition
  • ALL 7 processes must be present for something to be classified as living
  • Fire, robots, and crystals are NOT living — they lack most MRS GREN processes
  • Dormant seeds ARE alive — never classify a seed as non-living
  • Once-living things: wood, paper, leather, coal, dried leaves
  • 5 vertebrate groups: Fish, Amphibians, Reptiles, Birds, Mammals
  • Only mammals have fur and feed young with milk
  • Insects: 6 legs. Arachnids: 8 legs. Crustaceans: more than 8 legs.

Ready to test yourself? Try the quiz →

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🧠 Key Points to Remember
  • 7 life processes (MRS GREN): Movement, Respiration, Sensitivity, Growth, Reproduction, Excretion, Nutrition
  • All 7 must be present — fire moves and grows but is NOT living
  • Three categories: Living, Once-living (was alive), Non-living (never alive)
  • Vertebrates have a backbone; invertebrates do not
  • 5 classes of vertebrates: Fish, Amphibians, Reptiles, Birds, Mammals
  • Common exam trap: robots move and respond but are NOT living — they don't reproduce or carry out respiration
📝

Practice Questions

📝 Practice Question 1
A student argues that fire is a living thing because it moves, grows, and needs oxygen. Do you agree? Explain your answer.
(2 marks)
▼ Show Answer
✅ No. Although fire moves and grows, it does not carry out all seven life processes (MRS GREN). Fire does not reproduce, has no cells, does not respond to stimuli in a living way, and cannot independently regulate itself. True living things must show all seven characteristics of life.
📝 Practice Question 2
State the difference between a once-living thing and a non-living thing. Give one example of each.
(2 marks)
▼ Show Answer
✅ A once-living thing was alive at some point but is now dead — for example, a piece of dried wood or a fallen leaf. A non-living thing was never alive at any point — for example, a rock or a plastic bottle.
📝 Practice Question 3
Give two differences between vertebrates and invertebrates.
(2 marks)
▼ Show Answer
✅ (1) Vertebrates have a backbone (vertebral column) while invertebrates do not have a backbone. (2) Examples of vertebrates include fish, frogs, reptiles, birds and mammals; examples of invertebrates include insects, worms, jellyfish and spiders.
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Living vs Non-Living Things — Complete P3 Science Guide

One of the first and most important topics in Primary 3 Science is understanding the difference between living and non-living things. This concept forms the foundation for almost everything else in Singapore Primary Science — from food chains and ecosystems to plants and animals. Getting it right at P3 makes every later topic easier to understand.

Living things share seven characteristics, often remembered using the acronym MRS GREN: Movement, Respiration, Sensitivity, Growth, Reproduction, Excretion, and Nutrition. Every living thing — from the smallest bacterium to the largest whale — carries out all seven of these processes. Non-living things do not carry out any of these life processes on their own.

MRS GREN Explained Simply for P3 Students

M — Movement: All living things can move, though not all move from place to place. Plants move by growing towards light (phototropism) or opening and closing their flowers. Animals move their whole bodies. The key point for P3: even if you cannot see movement, it is still happening at a cellular level.

R — Respiration: All living things release energy from food. This is not the same as breathing — respiration is a chemical process that happens inside every cell. Even plants respire. During the day, plants also photosynthesise (which produces oxygen), but respiration happens 24 hours a day in all living cells.

S — Sensitivity: All living things can detect and respond to changes in their environment (called stimuli). A plant grows towards light. A cat jumps when startled. Your eyes blink when something comes near. Non-living things like rocks do not respond to changes around them.

G — Growth: All living things grow and develop. A seed grows into a tree. A baby grows into an adult. Growth in living things involves an increase in the number and size of cells. Non-living things can change in size (a rock can be worn down by water) but this is not growth — it does not involve cells.

R — Reproduction: All living things can produce offspring of the same kind. Dogs have puppies. Trees produce seeds. Even bacteria divide to produce more bacteria. This is one of the most fundamental characteristics of life.

E — Excretion: All living things remove waste products from their bodies. Humans excrete carbon dioxide (breathing out), urine, and sweat. Plants excrete oxygen as a by-product of photosynthesis. Excretion is important because waste products are toxic — if they built up inside the body, the organism would die.

N — Nutrition: All living things need food for energy and growth. Animals eat food (heterotrophs). Plants make their own food through photosynthesis (autotrophs). Fungi absorb nutrients from dead organic matter. The method of obtaining nutrition differs, but the need for it is universal.

Tricky Cases — Things That Seem Living But Are Not

These are the cases that P3 students often get wrong in exams. A fire seems to grow and "breathe" — but it does not have cells, cannot reproduce offspring of its own kind, and does not carry out all seven life processes. It is non-living. A robot can move and respond to stimuli — but it does not grow, reproduce, respire, excrete, or obtain nutrition as a living thing does. It is non-living. A crystal can grow in size — but this is a purely chemical process with no cells involved. It is non-living. When in doubt, ask: does this thing carry out ALL seven MRS GREN processes? If not, it is non-living.

📝 P3 Exam tip: When asked "is X a living thing?", always give a reason using MRS GREN. Do not just say "yes" or "no." Write: "Yes, a mushroom is a living thing because it carries out all the characteristics of living things including nutrition, growth, and reproduction." One sentence with a reason is always worth more marks than a bare yes or no answer.