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🌱 P3/P4 · PSLE Topic

Living and Non-Living Things✓ Updated 2026

Understand the difference between living, non-living, and once-living things for PSLE Science. Learn the 7 life processes (MRS GREN) with Singapore examples, exam tips, and a free quiz.

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Syllabus
P3/P4 · PSLE
⏱️
Reading time
8 minutes
🎯
Exam weight
High — often tested
🧪
Key skill
Apply + explain

What Makes Something Living?

Everything in the world can be sorted into three groups: living, non-living, and once-living. The tricky part is knowing exactly what separates them — because some non-living things (like fire and robots) seem to behave like living things, and some living things (like seeds) seem completely still and lifeless.

A living thing is anything that is currently carrying out all seven life processes. Scientists use the memory trick MRS GREN to remember all seven. A non-living thing never had life at all. A once-living thing was alive at some point in the past but is no longer carrying out any life processes.

Spotting Living, Non-Living, and Once-Living Things in Singapore

At a hawker centre in Singapore, you can find all three groups in one place. The grass growing in the planter boxes outside is living — it grows, absorbs nutrients, responds to rain, and reproduces. The plastic tray your food sits on is non-living — it was manufactured from oil, never had life, and carries out no life processes. The wooden chopsticks are once-living — they were made from a tree that once grew and photosynthesised, but no life processes occur in the wood any more.

The SingPost robot at some post offices can move, detect people, and respond to them — but it is still non-living. It does not grow, reproduce, excrete waste products from chemical reactions, or carry out respiration. Movement and sensitivity alone are not enough.

In the Botanic Gardens, a fallen tree trunk covered in moss shows both once-living (the dead wood) and living (the moss growing on it) in one object.

MRS GREN — All 7 Must Be Present

A living thing must carry out all seven of these processes. Missing even one means it does not qualify as living under the scientific definition.

Why Do Scientists Need This Classification?

Understanding whether something is living or non-living helps us predict how it will behave and how it interacts with its environment. A rock in MacRitchie Reservoir does nothing — it does not consume oxygen, reproduce, or respond to pollution. A water hyacinth plant in the same reservoir actively takes up nutrients, reproduces rapidly, and can cover the water surface so densely that it blocks sunlight for fish and other plants below. Knowing it is living explains why it spreads and why it needs to be controlled.

The once-living category matters too. Coal, oil, and natural gas are all once-living — they are the compressed remains of ancient organisms. Understanding this explains why burning them releases carbon that was locked away millions of years ago, contributing to climate change.

Living vs Non-Living vs Once-Living

Feature🌱 Living🪨 Non-living
All 7 MRS GREN?Yes — all sevenNo
Was it ever alive?Yes (currently)Never
ExamplesDog, tree, mushroom, bacteria, youRock, water, air, plastic, robot, fire
Once-living examplesDried leaf, wooden furniture, coal, charcoal, leather, dead insect, cotton cloth

The Mistakes Students Make Every Year

Trap 1 — Fire is not living
Fire moves, grows, needs oxygen, and produces CO₂ — but it does not reproduce, excrete metabolic waste, or grow from cells. It is a chemical reaction, not an organism.
Trap 2 — A seed IS living
Seeds look completely still and lifeless, but they are alive — just dormant. The cells inside the seed are living, and the seed will resume all life processes when conditions are right. Never classify a seed as non-living.
Trap 3 — A robot is not living
Robots can move and respond to stimuli, but they do not grow from cells, reproduce, or carry out respiration and excretion. Two out of seven is not enough.
Trap 4 — Respiration ≠ breathing
Respiration is the chemical process that releases energy from glucose in every living cell. Breathing is just the mechanical act of moving air into and out of lungs. Plants respire but do not breathe.

Everything You Need to Know — at a Glance

✏️ Practice Worksheet
🌿 Living Things & Habitats Worksheet
MCQ · True/False · Open-Ended · Model Answers included
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Related PSLE Topics

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Related Topics

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Exam technique — Living and Non-Living Things

The trickiest living/non-living questions are the boundary cases — things that look non-living but are alive, or look alive but are not. A seed sitting motionless on a shelf looks inert, but it is alive: it respires at a very low rate, it can grow and reproduce, and it has a lifespan. A candle flame moves, "feeds" on wax, grows, and produces waste — but it does not reproduce by cell division, grow by adding more flame cells, or show any true biological characteristics. Check all seven MRS GREN criteria before answering. If any one criterion is missing, the thing is not living.

The once-living category catches students regularly. A wooden table was once part of a living tree, but the wood itself is now non-living — it no longer carries out any life processes. Leather, cotton, wool, paper, dried food, coal, and fossil fuels are all once-living materials that are now non-living. When a question asks you to sort items into living / non-living / once-living, always ask: "Does this thing currently carry out all seven MRS GREN processes?" If yes, living. If it never did, non-living. If it once did but no longer does, once-living.

Questions students ask

Is a virus living or non-living?

Viruses sit in a grey zone that scientists still debate. They have genetic material and can reproduce — but only by taking over a living host cell. They do not independently carry out any other MRS GREN processes. For PSLE, viruses are treated as non-living. If asked, state: "Viruses are considered non-living because they cannot reproduce independently — they require a living host cell."

Why do we classify organisms?

Classification lets scientists communicate precisely and efficiently. Saying "mammal" immediately conveys: warm-blooded, has fur or hair, gives birth to live young, feeds young with milk — without stating each fact separately. Classification also reveals evolutionary relationships and allows scientists to predict characteristics of unfamiliar organisms based on the group they belong to.