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🎓 Living and Non-Living Things: Interactive Science Lesson for Kids

Learn to identify living and non-living things through engaging science activities and educational explanations.

This entry is part 1 of 15 in the series Science
Living and Non-Living Things: Interactive Science Lesson for Kids.
Learn to identify living and non-living things through engaging science activities and educational explanations.

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Living and Non-Living Things: Interactive Science Lesson for Kids

Learn to identify living and non-living things through engaging science activities and educational explanations. This fun and friendly science quiz teaches young learners the five characteristics of living things: living things need food, water, and air; they grow and change; they can reproduce (make more of themselves); they respond to their environment; and they are made of cells. Children will learn to identify living things (cats, sunflowers, squirrels, chickens, butterflies, mushrooms, oak trees), non-living things (rocks, toys, chairs, pencils, teddy bears, shoes, bricks, televisions, clouds), and once-living things (cotton t-shirts, wooden furniture, paper). The quiz also addresses common questions like "Is fire alive?" (No – fire does not have cells and cannot reproduce). Each question includes colorful explanations and friendly hints perfect for kindergarten, first, and second grade students. Designed for grades K-2, this lesson builds foundational science skills for understanding biology and the natural world. Complete all 10 questions and become a science detective!

Think about what needs food, water, and air to stay alive. A cat drinks water and eats food, so it is alive.

Living things are things that are alive! They need food, water, and air to survive. They grow, change, and can make more of themselves (called reproduction). You are a living thing. Your pet dog is a living thing. The tree outside is a living thing. Which of these is a living thing?

A teddy bear does not eat, breathe, or grow. It is not alive.

Non-living things are not alive. They do not need food, water, or air. They do not grow or make babies. A chair is non-living. A book is non-living. A pencil is non-living. Some non-living things come from living things (like a wooden table comes from a tree), but the object itself is not alive. Which of these is a non-living thing?

Think about what you see at the park. The squirrel breathes air just like you do.

All living things need air to survive. Animals breathe air using lungs (like humans) or gills (like fish). Even plants need air! They take in carbon dioxide from the air and release oxygen. Without air, living things would die. Which of these needs air to live?

A sunflower is a plant. Plants need water to grow and stay healthy.

All living things need water to survive. Your body is about 60% water! Animals drink water. Plants absorb water through their roots. Without water, living things get dehydrated (too dry) and can die. Even desert animals like camels need water – they just can go a long time without it. Which of these needs water to stay alive?

A bean sprout starts small and gets bigger over time. That is growth.

Living things grow and change over time. A tiny seed grows into a huge tree. A puppy grows into a dog. A baby grows into an adult. Non-living things do not grow – a chair stays the same size forever. Which of these shows that something is alive because it grows?

A chicken can lay eggs that hatch into baby chicks. That is reproduction.

Living things can reproduce – make more of themselves. Dogs have puppies. Cats have kittens. Birds lay eggs that hatch into baby birds. Plants grow from seeds. Non-living things cannot make copies of themselves – a rock cannot make baby rocks. Which of these can reproduce?

Your body moves your hand away to protect itself. That is a response to heat.

Living things can respond to changes around them. If you shine a light in your eyes, your pupils get smaller. If it is cold, you put on a jacket. A plant grows toward sunlight. These are called "responses" to the environment. Non-living things do not respond on their own. What happens when you touch a hot stove? Your body responds quickly!

A cotton t-shirt comes from a cotton plant. The cotton plant was once alive.

Some things were once alive but are not alive anymore. A wooden chair comes from a tree that was alive. A leather shoe comes from an animal's skin. A fossil is the remains of an ancient living thing. These are called once-living things. Which of these was once alive?

Fire does not have cells and cannot reproduce. It is a chemical reaction, not a living thing.

Fire needs oxygen, it grows, and it can spread. Does that mean fire is alive? No! Fire does not have cells. It cannot reproduce (make more fire on its own – it needs fuel). It does not need food or water. Fire is a chemical reaction, not a living thing. Scientists have a special checklist: living things have cells, use energy, grow, respond, reproduce, and adapt. Does fire meet all these requirements?

Butterfly = living, mushroom = living, oak tree = living. That is 3 living things.

Let us sort! Look at this list: butterfly, bicycle, mushroom, cloud, oak tree, television. How many of these are living things? Count carefully: butterfly (living), bicycle (non-living), mushroom (living – it is a fungus!), cloud (non-living), oak tree (living), television (non-living).

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Welcome to our Science Lessons and Quiz series! Each lesson combines learning and assessment through 10 carefully crafted questions. The questions introduce key scientific concepts, while the detailed explanations following each answer help learners verify their understanding and deepen their knowledge. Explore biology, chemistry, physics, earth science, and more through an engaging, interactive learning experience.

Keep Exploring Living and Non-Living Things – Free & Fun Resources!

Continue your science adventure with these trusted, free resources:

  • National Geographic Kids – Amazing videos, games, and articles about animals, plants, and the natural world.
  • Britannica Kids – Trusted encyclopedia entries about living and non-living things, written for young learners.
  • Nat Geo Explorer – Interactive articles and videos about habitats, ecosystems, and the difference between living and non-living.
  • Science Kids – Fun experiments, facts, and quizzes about living things for elementary students.

🌱 Fun fact: The largest living thing on Earth is a fungus! It is a honey fungus in Oregon that covers 3.7 square miles (2,385 acres) – that is bigger than 1,600 football fields! It has been growing for over 2,400 years. Fungi are living things that are neither plants nor animals – they are in their own kingdom called “Fungi.”

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