Organ Systems of the Body

A free interactive lesson on organ systems for Class 6 — from cell to tissue to organ to system. Covers the digestive, circulatory, respiratory, skeletal and nervous systems. Based on NCERT Class 6 Living Creatures chapter. Includes a quick quiz.

Class 6 ScienceClass 6 / Grade 6Ages 8–11
Lesson
🫀 Organ Systems of the Body
Cells → Tissues → Organs → Systems🔬Cellsmallest unit🧫Tissuecells together❤️Organtissues together🫀Systemorgans togetherYour body is cells organising themselves upward!

A single cell is tiny. But when millions of similar cells work together, they form a tissue. When different tissues work together, they form an organ — like your heart or stomach. When organs team up, they form a system. And all your systems together make you.

The levels of organisation

Living things are organised in a hierarchy:

  • Cell — smallest unit of life
  • Tissue — group of similar cells doing the same job (e.g. muscle tissue)
  • Organ — different tissues working together (e.g. the heart = muscle + nerve + connective tissue)
  • Organ system — group of organs doing a major body function (e.g. circulatory system)
  • Organism — all systems working together = you

The digestive system

The digestive system breaks food into nutrients small enough to absorb into the blood:

  1. Mouth — chewing and saliva break food into smaller pieces
  2. Oesophagus — carries food to the stomach
  3. Stomach — acid and enzymes digest proteins
  4. Small intestine — most digestion happens here; nutrients are absorbed into the blood
  5. Large intestine — absorbs water; remaining waste forms faeces

The circulatory system

The circulatory system transports oxygen and nutrients to every cell and removes waste. The heart pumps blood through a network of arteries (away from heart), veins (towards heart), and capillaries (tiny vessels in tissues). A human heart beats about 70 times per minute — over 100,000 times a day.

Other important systems

  • Respiratory system — lungs take in oxygen and expel carbon dioxide with every breath.
  • Skeletal system — 206 bones support the body, protect organs, and allow movement at joints.
  • Nervous system — the brain and spinal cord receive information from the senses and send signals to muscles and organs.
  • Muscular system — muscles contract to produce movement, from blinking to running.

All systems work simultaneously and are interdependent — if the circulatory system fails, every other system collapses within minutes.

Frequently asked questions

What is the correct order from cell to organism?

Cell → Tissue → Organ → Organ System → Organism.

What does the small intestine do?

The small intestine is the main site of digestion and nutrient absorption. Enzymes break down food into molecules small enough to pass through the intestinal wall into the blood.

How many times does the heart beat per day?

About 100,000 times — roughly 70 beats per minute. Over a lifetime of 70 years, the heart beats about 2.5 billion times.

What is the function of the nervous system?

The nervous system processes information from the senses and sends signals throughout the body. The brain makes decisions; the spinal cord relays signals; nerves reach every body part.

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