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P3 Science Β· Magnets

Magnets P3 Science: Notes, Diagrams, PSLE Questions & Free Quiz

Everything about magnetic materials, poles, forces, and real-world applications β€” with model answers for every exam question type.

Magnets P3 Science: Notes, Diagrams, PSLE Questions & Free Quiz

πŸ“… Updated May 2026 Β· Aligned to MOE 2026 syllabus

Magnets are all around us β€” from the tiny magnets in your phone's speaker to the massive electromagnets used in hospitals and scrapyards. In P3 Science, you learn the fundamentals of magnetism: what materials are attracted to magnets, how the poles of magnets interact, and how magnetic force can act without touching. These concepts are not only tested at PSLE but are the foundation for understanding electricity and motors in later years.

Magnetic vs Non-Magnetic Materials β€” P3 Notes & PSLE Questions

Only certain materials are attracted to magnets. These are called magnetic materials. The four magnetic materials you must know for PSLE are:

A critical exam point: not all metals are magnetic. Many students assume all metals are attracted to magnets, but this is incorrect. The following metals are NOT magnetic:

Non-metals such as wood, plastic, glass, rubber, and paper are also not attracted to magnets. Only iron, steel, nickel, and cobalt are reliable magnetic materials at PSLE level.

Poles of a Magnet β€” Attraction, Repulsion & P3 Exam Questions

Every magnet has two poles β€” a North pole (N) and a South pole (S). The poles are the regions where the magnetic force is strongest. The centre of a bar magnet has the weakest magnetic force. When you suspend a bar magnet freely, the North pole points towards Earth's geographic North Pole (because Earth itself acts as a giant magnet).

The fundamental rule of magnetic poles:

Like poles REPEL (push apart)  |  Unlike poles ATTRACT (pull together)

This rule applies to all magnets. It is tested in diagrams where you must predict whether two magnets will attract or repel based on which poles face each other, and in questions about compass needle behaviour.

Magnetic Force as a Non-Contact Force β€” P3 Notes & Questions

One of the most remarkable features of magnetic force is that it can act without the magnet physically touching the object. This makes it a non-contact force. A magnet can attract an iron nail through a piece of paper, through a plastic bag, through water, or even through your hand β€” without any direct contact between the magnet and the nail.

The only requirement is that the distance is not too great. Magnetic force weakens rapidly as distance increases β€” doubling the distance reduces the force significantly. At very large distances, the force is essentially zero.

Materials that magnetic force can pass through (non-magnetic materials): paper, cardboard, plastic, glass, water, wood, cloth, your hand, thin metals (copper, aluminium). Materials that can block or reduce magnetic force: thick iron or steel plates (these are used in magnetic shielding).

Permanent vs Temporary Magnets β€” P3 Definitions & Examples

A permanent magnet is one that retains its magnetism indefinitely under normal conditions. These are made from steel, alnico (aluminium-nickel-cobalt alloy), or rare-earth materials. Bar magnets, horseshoe magnets, and button magnets found in schools are usually permanent magnets.

A temporary magnet only behaves as a magnet when a magnetic field is present β€” for example, a piece of iron that becomes magnetised when placed near a magnet, but loses its magnetism when the magnet is removed. Iron is a soft magnetic material that easily magnetises and demagnetises.

Magnets can be demagnetised (made to lose their magnetic properties) by: hammering them, heating them strongly, or repeatedly dropping them. These actions disrupt the alignment of the tiny magnetic domains inside the material.

How to Make a Magnet by Stroking β€” P3 Method & Questions

You can make a temporary magnet by stroking an iron or steel object repeatedly in the same direction with a permanent magnet. This is called the stroking method. Each stroke aligns the magnetic domains in the iron in the same direction, building up a net magnetic field. The direction of stroking determines which end becomes the North pole and which becomes the South pole.

Key rule: always stroke in the same direction (do not stroke back and forth) and always use the same pole of the magnet throughout. Random stroking in both directions cancels out the alignment.

Compass & Earth's Magnetic Field β€” P3 Notes & PSLE Questions

A compass is simply a tiny magnet (the compass needle) balanced on a pivot so it can spin freely. Because Earth has a magnetic field (caused by its molten iron core), the compass needle aligns with Earth's field β€” the North pole of the needle points toward Earth's geographic North Pole.

This is why compasses have been used for navigation for over 2,000 years. When you use a compass near a strong magnet, the needle is deflected away from North and points toward the magnet's South pole instead β€” this is how you can tell whether a magnetic field is present and how strong it is.

The difference between geographic North (true North) and magnetic North is called magnetic declination. Near Singapore's latitude, this difference is small but measurable. For PSLE, simply know that a compass needle points North because Earth has a magnetic field, and that nearby magnets can deflect the needle.

Real-World Applications of Magnets β€” Singapore Examples & Questions

Magnets have countless practical applications, many of which appear in PSLE exam questions:

⚠️ Common Exam Traps

Trap 1: "All metals are magnetic." β€” WRONG. Only iron, steel, nickel, and cobalt are magnetic. Copper, aluminium, gold, and silver are NOT attracted to magnets.

Trap 2: "Magnetic force only works when magnets touch the object." β€” WRONG. Magnetic force is a non-contact force that acts through air and many materials without physical contact.

Trap 3: "The North pole of a compass points toward the North Pole of Earth's magnet." β€” Actually, Earth's geographic North Pole is near the magnetic South pole (unlike poles attract). This confuses many students β€” the compass North pole points toward geographic North because it is attracted to the magnetic South pole there.

πŸ“‹ Key Facts Summary

  • The 4 magnetic materials: iron, steel, nickel, cobalt
  • NOT magnetic: copper, aluminium, gold, silver, wood, plastic
  • Like poles REPEL; unlike poles ATTRACT
  • Magnetic force is strongest at the poles; weakest at the centre
  • Magnetic force is a non-contact force β€” it acts without touching
  • Magnetic force can pass through paper, plastic, water, and thin non-magnetic materials
  • A compass needle aligns with Earth's magnetic field, pointing North
  • Magnets can be demagnetised by heating, hammering, or repeated dropping

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🧠 Key Points to Remember
  • Only 4 magnetic materials: iron, steel, nickel, cobalt
  • Like poles (N–N or S–S) repel; unlike poles (N–S) attract
  • Every magnet has exactly 2 poles β€” breaking a magnet creates 2 smaller complete magnets
  • Magnetic force is a non-contact force β€” it acts through air and some materials
  • A compass needle is a magnet β€” it points north because of Earth's magnetic field
  • Temporary magnets (e.g. iron paper clip) lose magnetism; permanent magnets (steel) retain it
  • Strength of magnet measured by how many paper clips it can pick up
πŸ“

Practice Questions

πŸ“ Practice Question 1
A student uses a magnet to test five objects: an iron nail, a brass key, a steel paper clip, a copper coin, and a rubber eraser. Which objects will be attracted to the magnet? Explain.
(2 marks)
β–Ό Show Answer
βœ… The iron nail and the steel paper clip will be attracted to the magnet. Only magnetic materials (iron, steel, nickel and cobalt) are attracted to magnets. Brass, copper and rubber are non-magnetic materials and will not be attracted.
πŸ“ Practice Question 2
Explain why a compass needle always points north.
(2 marks)
β–Ό Show Answer
βœ… A compass needle is a small magnet. The Earth behaves like a giant magnet with a magnetic south pole near its geographic North Pole. The north-seeking pole of the compass needle is attracted to the Earth's magnetic south pole, causing the compass to always point towards geographic north.
πŸ“ Practice Question 3
Two bar magnets are brought close together. Magnet A has its North pole facing Magnet B's North pole. Describe what happens and explain why.
(2 marks)
β–Ό Show Answer
βœ… The two magnets repel each other (push apart). This is because like poles repel β€” two North poles facing each other experience a repulsive magnetic force that pushes them away from each other.
βœ…
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P3 Magnets PSLE Exam Technique β€” How to Score Full Marks

The two conceptual errors that account for the majority of lost marks on magnets questions are: assuming all metals are magnetic (only iron, steel, nickel, and cobalt are), and thinking that cutting a magnet in half gives you a north half and a south half (it does not β€” each half becomes a complete magnet with its own north and south pole). Both of these errors are tested directly and regularly. Make sure both are clearly understood before any exam.

Magnetic force is a non-contact force, which means it can act across a gap without any physical touching between the magnet and the object. It can also act through non-magnetic materials β€” paper, cardboard, plastic, glass, and water do not block magnetic force. A question might show a magnet beneath a table attracting a steel pin on top β€” this is possible because the table (wood) does not block the magnetic field. The only things that weaken magnetic force are distance (the further away, the weaker) and magnetic shielding (surrounding something with a thick iron casing).

Questions students ask

Can a magnet attract a copper coin?

No β€” copper is non-magnetic. Some Singapore coins contain steel alloys and are magnetic; others are not. For exam purposes, copper itself is never attracted to a magnet. If a coin is attracted, it contains iron, steel, or nickel.

Why is a compass reliable for finding north?

A compass needle is a small balanced permanent magnet. Earth acts as a giant weak magnet, with its magnetic south pole near geographic north. Unlike poles attract, so the north-seeking end of the compass needle points toward Earth's magnetic south pole β€” approximately geographic north. Singapore, near the magnetic equator, has a horizontal magnetic field that makes compasses particularly reliable here.