> ||
P4 Science Β· Complete Guide

P4 Science Topics 2026: Complete Notes, Questions & MOE Syllabus Guide

Master every P4 Science topic β€” from plant reproduction to electrical circuits β€” with clear explanations, key facts, and how each topic connects to PSLE.

P4 Science Topics 2026: Complete Notes, Questions & MOE Syllabus Guide

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

Primary 4 Science is a significant step up from P3. Where P3 introduces fundamental concepts, P4 goes deeper β€” you study complete body systems rather than individual organs, explore how plants reproduce, understand the behaviour of matter in different states, and learn about electrical circuits for the first time. Everything you learn in P4 is directly tested at PSLE, often in more complex questions that require you to apply concepts rather than just recall them.

This guide covers every major P4 Science topic with the depth and vocabulary you need to do well in both school exams and as preparation for PSLE.

1. Plant Parts & Their Functions β€” P4 Notes & Exam Questions

In P3, you learned the basic parts of a plant. In P4, you study their functions in much more detail, particularly the transport of water and nutrients:

2. Plant Reproduction P4 β€” Pollination, Seeds & Key Questions

P4 introduces the complete process of sexual reproduction in flowering plants:

3. Human Digestive System P4 β€” Organs, Functions & PSLE Links

The digestive system is a core P4 topic covered in detail in the digestive system article on this site. Key concepts:

4. Matter & Its Changes P4 β€” States, Evaporation & Exam Tips

P4 introduces the particle model of matter and changes of state:

5. Electrical Circuits P4 β€” Series, Parallel & Key Questions

P4 is the first year students learn about electrical circuits in detail. Key concepts:

6. Forces P4 β€” Gravity, Friction & Contact vs Non-Contact Notes

Forces cause objects to change their speed, direction, or shape. In P4, you study:

How P4 Science Topics Connect to PSLE β€” What Examiners Test

Every P4 topic directly feeds into PSLE questions, often in combination with P5 material. Here is how each P4 topic typically appears at PSLE:

P4 TopicHow It Appears at PSLE
Plant reproductionQuestions about pollination, seed dispersal method, or germination conditions; may be combined with adaptation questions
Digestive systemIdentifying organs and their functions; explaining what happens if an organ is damaged; enzyme identification questions
Electrical circuitsPredicting which bulbs light up; explaining how brightness changes; identifying conductors and insulators in a scenario
Matter and changesExplaining the water cycle (evaporation/condensation); explaining everyday observations (steam from hot food, dew on grass, ice in warm room)
ForcesExplaining why an object moves or does not move; calculating or comparing forces; explaining friction in real-world contexts

P4 Science Exam Tips β€” Common Questions & How to Score Full Marks

P4 Science exams in Singapore schools typically follow a similar format to PSLE β€” multiple choice questions and open-ended questions. The topics that most commonly appear as high-mark OEQ items in P4 school exams are:

For P4 OEQ answers, the same principles apply as for PSLE: always use scientific keywords, always explain the mechanism (not just describe the observation), and always answer every part of the question. A common P4 mistake is to describe what an organ does without explaining why β€” for example, "the small intestine absorbs nutrients" is worth 1 mark, but "the small intestine has thousands of tiny villi which greatly increase the surface area for the absorption of digested nutrients into the bloodstream" is worth 2 marks because it includes the mechanism.

πŸ“‹ P4 Science Key Facts

  • Plant reproduction: pollination β†’ fertilisation β†’ seed development β†’ dispersal β†’ germination
  • Seed dispersal methods: wind, water, animal (eating/carrying), explosion
  • Germination needs: water + warmth + air (not sunlight!)
  • Digestion order: mouth β†’ oesophagus β†’ stomach β†’ small intestine β†’ large intestine
  • 3 states of matter: solid, liquid, gas; heating causes expansion; cooling causes contraction
  • Series circuit: one break = all components fail. Parallel: more reliable.
  • Forces can change speed, direction, or shape of objects
  • Friction: rough surfaces = more friction; smooth surfaces = less

Ready to test yourself? Try the quiz β†’

Explore: P3 Β· P4 Β· P5 Β· PSLE Β· All Articles

🧠 Key Points to Remember
  • P4 Science covers 3 major themes: Systems (body/circuits), Interactions (forces/food webs), Energy (heat/electricity)
  • All P4 topics are tested directly in PSLE β€” not just P5 and P6 content
  • Key P4 topics: Digestion, Respiration (briefly), States of Matter, Electricity, Forces, Plants
  • Series vs Parallel circuits is one of the highest-frequency P4 PSLE questions
  • Forces (gravity, friction, elastic) frequently appear in both Paper 1 and Paper 2
  • P4 builds the foundation for P5 Ecosystems, Plant Reproduction, and Water Cycle
πŸ“

Practice Questions

πŸ“ Practice Question 1
Name the five themes of the PSLE Science syllabus and give one topic that belongs to each theme.
(5 marks)
β–Ό Show Answer
βœ… (1) Diversity β€” Living and Non-Living Things; (2) Systems β€” Human Digestive System or Electrical Systems; (3) Cycles β€” Water Cycle or Life Cycles; (4) Interactions β€” Forces and Motion or Food Webs; (5) Energy β€” Heat and Temperature or Electricity.
πŸ“ Practice Question 2
A P4 student is starting to prepare for the PSLE. She has studied Electricity & Circuits but has not yet covered Forces. Suggest the order in which she should cover the remaining P4 topics and give a reason.
(2 marks)
β–Ό Show Answer
βœ… She should cover Forces & Motion next (as it is the other major P4 Physics topic and is frequently tested), followed by the Digestive System (P4 Biology), then States of Matter (P4 Chemistry), then Plant Parts (P4 Biology). Covering related topics together helps build connections and understanding.
πŸ“ Practice Question 3
Explain why understanding P4 Science topics well is important for PSLE preparation, even though PSLE is taken in P6.
(2 marks)
β–Ό Show Answer
βœ… PSLE Science tests all topics from P3 to P6. P4 topics such as Electricity, Forces, and the Digestive System are directly tested in PSLE. Without a solid understanding of P4 content, students will struggle with both content questions and application questions in the PSLE.
βœ…
10 Questions Β· Instant Feedback Β· No Sign-Up

Ready to Test Yourself on P4 Science Topics?

Try our free interactive quiz β€” covers all the key concepts from this page.

Start Free Quiz β†’
πŸ“„

Download: P4 Science Topics β€” Revision Notes (PDF)

Free printable notes covering all key concepts, definitions and exam tips from this page.

πŸ“₯ Download PDF
πŸ“ O-Level Exam Practice
Free Mock Papers β€” Chemistry, Physics & Biology
40 MCQ Β· 1-hour timed Β· auto-marked with full explanations
Start a Mock Paper β†’

P4 Science Singapore β€” What Parents and Students Need to Know in 2026

Primary 4 Science in Singapore is a significant step up from P3. In P3, students are mainly introduced to the world of science through observation and simple classification. In P4, the focus shifts to understanding systems and processes β€” how parts work together, why things happen, and how to explain observations using scientific language. This shift is important because the skills built in P4 are exactly what PSLE examiners test in Section B open-ended questions.

P4 Science introduces several topics that are examined every year in PSLE β€” including the digestive system, electrical circuits, food chains, and the water cycle. Getting a strong foundation in P4 is not just about scoring well in SA1 and SA2. It is about building the understanding that will carry students through P5 and into the PSLE in P6 without needing to relearn fundamentals from scratch.

P4 Topics That Directly Feed Into PSLE

Digestive System: P4 introduces the digestive system with all major organs and their functions. At PSLE, students need to know not just the names but exactly what each organ does β€” the stomach breaks down proteins, the small intestine absorbs nutrients into the bloodstream, the large intestine absorbs water. The P4 foundation makes this revision straightforward in P6.

Electrical Circuits: P4 covers basic circuits β€” components, conductors, insulators, simple series circuits. P5 builds on this with parallel circuits and more complex configurations. By PSLE, students need to handle multi-branch circuits with multiple switches. The P4 foundation of understanding current flow and what a complete circuit requires is absolutely critical.

Food Chains: P4 introduces producers, consumers, and decomposers. P5 and P6 extend this to food webs with multiple interconnected chains and population change reasoning. Students who understood food chains well at P4 find the PSLE food web questions much more manageable.

Water Cycle: P4 covers evaporation, condensation, and the basic water cycle. PSLE adds transpiration, cloud formation, and human impact on the water cycle. Students who remember the P4 basics can build on them easily, while students who did not master P4 find themselves struggling with the same foundational concepts again at P6.

How P4 Science Exams Work in Singapore Schools

Most Singapore schools hold Continual Assessment 1 (CA1) in Term 1, SA1 in Term 2, CA2 in Term 3, and SA2 in Term 4. P4 Science papers typically follow the same format as PSLE β€” Section A with multiple choice questions and Section B with open-ended questions β€” but at an appropriate level of difficulty for P4. The total marks and time allocation vary by school, but most P4 Science papers are 80 to 100 marks over 1 hour 30 minutes to 1 hour 45 minutes.

Good study habits formed at P4 β€” reading questions carefully, writing complete sentences in Section B, using scientific keywords β€” pay dividends all the way through to PSLE. Parents can help by checking that their child's Section B answers use the correct vocabulary, not just the right idea expressed in everyday language. "The food goes to the stomach" is weaker than "Food passes from the oesophagus into the stomach, where proteins are broken down by digestive juices."

πŸ’‘ P4 parent tip: After each SA1 and SA2, review the marked paper with your child. For every Section B question where marks were lost, identify whether the issue was (a) not knowing the concept, (b) knowing the concept but using wrong keywords, or (c) misreading the question. Each cause needs a different fix β€” concept revision, keyword drilling, or exam technique practice. ScienceStar's topic pages and quizzes address all three.

P4 Science vs PSLE β€” Where Students Go Wrong & How to Prepare

P4 Science is the year students discover that knowing the facts is not enough. In P3, a question about plants might ask "name the part that absorbs water" β€” one word, one mark. In P4, the equivalent question becomes "explain why removing the roots would cause the plant to wilt and eventually die" β€” which requires understanding that roots absorb water, that water is transported up the stem to the leaves, and that leaves need water for photosynthesis and to keep their cells turgid. Students who approach P4 with a P3 mindset β€” memorising labels without understanding functions β€” hit a wall when the open-ended questions arrive.

The P4 topics that give students the most trouble are Electrical Systems (feels intuitive but requires precise language about current, energy, and the effect of circuit changes), Forces (weight vs mass distinction and the direction of friction are consistently missed), and Food Chains (population change logic is applied backwards more often than not β€” students confuse what happens to predators vs prey when a population changes). Targeted practice on these three topics early in P4 prevents problems that compound in P5 and PSLE.

Questions students ask

Why is P4 Science harder than P3?

The content gets deeper, but more importantly, the thinking required changes. P3 is about observation, description, and classification β€” recognising what things are and sorting them into categories. P4 adds explanation and application β€” understanding why things happen and predicting what will happen in new situations. The shift from "what" to "why and how" is the defining challenge. Students who enjoy working out the reason behind observations tend to find P4 more engaging than P3.

Which P4 topics are most important for PSLE preparation?

All P4 topics appear in PSLE, but Electrical Systems and Food Chains appear in virtually every paper and often carry significant Booklet B marks. Forces appears every year. Photosynthesis and the Water Cycle appear most years as data or fair test questions. The digestive system appears regularly with diagram labelling and function questions. Matter and States of Change β€” though tested less frequently as a standalone topic β€” provides the context for many data interpretation and fair test scenarios.