
The Human Digestive System: The Intestines
Discover how the small and large intestines work together to absorb nutrients and water from our food.
About This Topic
Discover how the small and large intestines work together to absorb nutrients and water from our food.
Key Questions
- How do nutrients from food get into our blood?
- What is the difference between the small and large intestine?
- What happens to the parts of food our bodies cannot use?
Active Learning Ideas
See all activities→Activities & Teaching Strategies
See all activities
Planning templates for Science
5E Model
The 5E Model structures lessons through five phases (Engage, Explore, Explain, Elaborate, and Evaluate), guiding students from curiosity to deep understanding through inquiry-based learning.
Unit PlannerThematic Unit
Organize a multi-week unit around a central theme or essential question that cuts across topics, texts, and disciplines, helping students see connections and build deeper understanding.
RubricSingle-Point Rubric
Build a single-point rubric that defines only the "meets standard" level, leaving space for teachers to document what exceeded and what fell short. Simple to create, easy for students to understand.
More in Animals, Including Humans
The Human Digestive System: Getting Started
Explore how the body begins to break down food, starting from the mouth and travelling down the oesophagus to the stomach.
2 methodologies
Types of Human Teeth and Their Functions
Identify incisors, canines, premolars, and molars, and investigate how their different shapes help us bite, tear, and chew food.
2 methodologies
Caring for Our Teeth
Investigate the causes of tooth decay and learn how brushing, flossing, and a healthy diet help protect our dental health.
2 methodologies
Producers, Predators, and Prey
Define the roles of different living things in a habitat, focusing on how plants produce energy and animals consume it.
2 methodologies
Constructing Food Chains
Create and analyse various food chains to show the flow of energy from producers to apex predators in different environments.
2 methodologies