Science Module 1 For Grade 8
Science Module 1 For Grade 8
Science
Quarter 4 – Module 1:
Structures and Functions
of the Digestive System
CO_Q4_Science 8_ Module 1
Science – Grade 8
Alternative Delivery Mode
Quarter 4 – Module 1: Structures and Functions of the Digestive System
First Edition, 2020
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Science
Quarter 4 – Module 1:
Structures and Functions
of the Digestive System
Introductory Message
This Self-Learning Module (SLM) is prepared so that you, our dear learners,
can continue your studies and learn while at home. Activities, questions, directions,
exercises, and discussions are carefully stated for you to understand each lesson.
Each SLM is composed of different parts. Each part shall guide you step-by-
step as you discover and understand the lesson prepared for you.
In addition to the material in the main text, Notes to the Teacher are also
provided to our facilitators and parents for strategies and reminders on how they can
best help you on your home-based learning.
Please use this module with care. Do not put unnecessary marks on any part
of this SLM. Use a separate sheet of paper in answering the exercises and tests. And
read the instructions carefully before performing each task.
If you have any questions in using this SLM or any difficulty in answering the
tasks in this module, do not hesitate to consult your teacher or facilitator.
Thank you.
What I Need to Know
This module was designed and written with you in mind. It is here to help
you master the structures and functions of the digestive system. The scope of this
module permits it to be used in many different learning situations. The language
used recognizes the diverse vocabulary level of students. The lessons are arranged
to follow the standard sequence of the course. But the order in which you read
them can be changed to correspond with the learner’s material you are now using.
3. Describe how some accessory organs and glands help the body in the
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CO_Q4_Science 8_ Module 1
What I Know
Directions: Choose the letter of the correct answer. Write your answers on a
separate sheet of paper.
1. In what process do animals take in food that provides energy and nutrients?
A. assimilation
B. digestion
C. excretion
D. ingestion
2. The process in which digested foods are distributed into different parts of the
body cells are _______.
A. assimilation
B. digestion
C. excretion
D. ingestion
3. What is the process of turning food into smaller molecules with the aid of
enzymes?
A. churning
B. mastication
C. chemical digestion
D. mechanical digestion
6. Which of the following breaks down food into tinier pieces to begin
mechanical digestion?
A. esophagus
B. stomach
C. teeth
D. tongue
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CO_Q4_Science 8_ Module 1
7. What organ system is responsible for breaking down of large molecules into
smaller molecules and absorption of organic compounds needed by the body?
A. circulatory system
B. digestive system
C. Nervous system
D. respiratory system
9. What do you call the wavelike contraction of the smooth muscles of digestive
tract pushes food in small sections through the gastro-intestinal tube?
A. mixing movement
B. parietal movement
C. contractile movement
D. peristaltic movement
12. Which of the following shows the correct sequence of the processes
involved in the human digestive system?
A. assimilation, absorption, ingestion, digestion, and egestion
B. digestion, ingestion, assimilation, egestion and absorption
C. egestion, absorption, digestion, assimilation and ingestion
D. ingestion, digestion, absorption, assimilation and egestion
13. What is the term for the food that is chewed and mixed with saliva that turns
into a moist ball?
A. bolus
B. chyme
C. feces
D. gastric juice
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CO_Q4_Science 8_ Module 1
14. It is the process by which the nutrients from the digested food move into the
blood vessels passing through the lining of the small intestine.
A. assimilation
B. digestion
C. egestion
D. elimination
15. Which of these substances is an enzyme that digests protein in the stomach?
A. amylase
B. hydrochloric acid
C. pepsin
D. saliva
Lesson
The food that we eat plays a central role in the survival of species. It
provides the energy that enables us to carry out the many activities that we do
each day such as breathing, walking, studying and cooking. Food also provides
the substances needed for growth and repair of body parts.
The cells in the body need food for energy used for growth and repair. Food
must be broken down into a form that these microscopic cells can use. The body
changes food into a usable form by means of a group of organs referred to as the
digestive system.
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CO_Q4_Science 8_ Module 1
What’s In
M W Q S D F F O O D M E T S Y
O T R S A L I V A Z G S Q M K
U B P A N C R E A S A O G A H
T E E T H X M P X S L P D L H
H H J O C K L P F H L H W L Q
S D F N A H A H S Q B A T I G
G H J G M K L A F Q L G W N T
A S W U O R T R Q D A U T T G
F G H E T M J Y R K D S L E P
F S W E S G H N E J D K L S V
L I V E R F B X C D E Q E T Y
G H J K V D F G T A R X A I W
G H J K D S A N U S Q E R N T
H J K S A E W A M X C B F E Q
L A R G E I N T E S T I N E F
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CO_Q4_Science 8_ Module 1
What’s New
Materials Needed:
1. Find someone whom you can play the board game with.
2. Choose a playing token for you and your playmate; place your tokens
on the board’s starting line.
3. Take turns in rolling the dice.
4. The number on the dice tells the number of boxes you may move your token.
5. Should your token land on a box with instructions beside it, execute
the instructions.
6. The player who first makes it all the way throughout the digestive system
and down to finish line wins the game.
Questions:
___________________________________________________________________________ .
3. What do the instructions beside the boxes tell you about the digestive
system?
___________________________________________________________________________ .
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CO_Q4_Science 8_ Module 1
BOARD GAME
FINISH
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CO_Q4_Science 8_ Module 1
What is It
In Activity 1, you must have inferred that the digestive system is composed of
different organs that work together to break down food and nourish the body. It also
involves important processes in order to carry out the function of the digestive
system.
The function of the digestive system is digestion, the breakdown of organic
compounds into their simple forms for use by the cells. Digestion is the chief
function of the digestive system. It breaks down food mechanically and chemically.
Let us take a journey
throughout the human digestive
system to see how it works and how the
organs coordinate in order to carry out
the processes of digestion (see figure 1).
To make it a little more interesting, try
to imagine what happens to a
hamburger when eaten. Remember
that ground meat is mostly protein,
mayonnaise is mostly fat, and the bun
is mostly carbohydrate. The journey of
the food starts from the mouth down to
the anus takes about 18-20 hours.
.
B. DIGESTION is the second process involved in digestive system. It is the process
that involves break down of large food molecules into smaller molecules for easy
absorption of the cells. Both chemical and mechanical digestions begin immediately
in the mouth. While the food is in the mouth, the teeth cut, crush, and break it apart
into tiny pieces while the tongue helps mix food with saliva secreted by the salivary
glands forming into a moist ball called bolus so it can be easily swallowed. This
process is known as mastication or chewing considered as a mechanical digestion,
which is the initial stage of digestion. The saliva contains salivary amylase, the
enzyme that breaks down starch into smaller carbohydrate. Then, the bolus passes
from the mouth to the esophagus - a tube that attaches the mouth to the stomach.
A series of wave-like muscle contractions known as peristalsis push and transport
foods and liquids in small sections to the stomach.
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The stomach is a J-shaped, bag-like muscular organ that can hold
approximately one liter of fluid and food. The primary function of the stomach is to
store food, which turns to chyme after being acted on by the stomach acid. Chyme
is a semifluid material formed from bolus that is acted upon by the gastric juices
secreted by the stomach. The walls of the stomach have special cells that secrete
gastric juices like hydrochloric acid and pepsin that begin the chemical
breakdown of proteins.
Let us take a short detour into the three organs that are part of the digestive
system and helps in secretion of essential substances. These organs are the liver, the
pancreas and the gall bladder.
The liver produces bile, a green fluid that turns large fat droplets into smaller
ones and stores them in the gall bladder. When necessary, bile gets into the small
intestine and helps in the digestion of fat. The pancreas makes three different kinds
of enzymes namely amylase, peptidase, and lipase released through a pancreatic
duct that aid in the digestion of all three organic compounds such as carbohydrates,
proteins, and fats respectively. The process takes about half of a liter of digestive
juices each day. The liver is the biggest organ inside the body with a mass of about
two kilograms. Gall bladder - a small pear-shaped sac that can hold about 50ml of
bile. The pancreas is a small organ found below the stomach.
The small intestine is an organ that breaks down food further into
substances, such as glucose, that can be absorbed by the villi. It has three parts
namely the duodenum, the jejunum, and ileum. The duodenum is the first and
shortest part of the small intestine that starts at the lower end of the stomach and
extends for about 20 cm to 25 cm in length. Basically, it is in charge for the
continuous breaking-down process as it partially receives the chyme from the
stomach, it resumes chemical digestion of food, and prepares for absorption through
the villi.
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Organic compounds such as carbohydrates, proteins, and fats are specifically
broken down with the aid of different enzymes. Carbohydrates are broken down into
sugars by enzymes like amylase, maltase and lactase. Proteins are broken down into
amino acids by enzymes like trypsin and peptidase. Fats are broken down into fatty
acids by the enzyme lipase. After about four hours, the stomach pushes food into the
small intestines. See Figure 2 and Figure 2.1. The production and release of enzymes
and acids in the digestive system is called secretion. It aids in the breaking down of
complex food molecules into their chemical building blocks.
The jejunum is the second part of the small intestine that is 2.5 cm in length.
Its wall works for absorption through enterocytes or columnar cells of small nutrient
particles which have been previously digested by the enzymes in the duodenum.
The Large intestine is divided into caecum, ascending colon, transverse colon,
descending colon, and sigmoid colon. This is where reabsorption of liquid,
electrolytes and some vitamins from the undigested food takes place. It secretes
mucus to aid in the formation of feces and maintains alkaline conditions. This is the
last segment of the gastrointestinal tract that completes absorption and compacts
waste.
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E. Egestion is the last process that occurs in the digestive system. It is the release
of undigested food collected in the rectum called feces and pushed out of the body
through the anus by defecation.
What’s More
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Activity 4. Match ME!
Directions: Describe the function of each organ in the digestive system by
matching column A with column B. Write only the letter of the
correct answer on a separate sheet of paper.
Column A Column B
B.
2. It reabsorbs water from undigested food
materials coming from the small intestine. Illustrated by: Rosa Mia L. Pontillo
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Activity 5. I Fill You!
Directions: Label the main organs involved in the digestive system in the figure
and answer the questions that follow. Write your answers on a
separate sheet of paper.
2. Name the enzymes secreted by the organs identified from box #1, #3 and #4.
_________________________________________________________________.
3. The liver produces bile. How does bile help in digestion of food?
_________________________________________________________________.
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Activity 6. Share It!
Directions: Study the figure below and answer the questions that follow. Write
your answers on a separate sheet of paper.
a. mouth ________________________________________________________________;
b. stomach ______________________________________________________________;
3. How are nutrients from the food you eat absorbed after digestion?
4. Why are villus and microvilli important in the human digestive system?
Scoring Rubrics
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What I Have Learned
Down: Across:
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What I Can Do
● Mouth ● Villi
● Esophagus ● Rectum
● Peristalsis ● Anus
Situation: Imagine that you are a piece of food (bread, pizza, mango, etc.) that is
about to be eaten by a human being! As you journey through the digestive system,
starting from the first bite and ending with your exit from the human body, you are
able to meet the different organs and enzymes that interact with you.
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Assessment
Directions: Choose the letter of the correct answer. Write your answers on a separate
sheet of paper.
2. In which part of the digestive system does the breaking down of food into tinier
pieces occur?
A. mouth
B. stomach
C. small intestine
D. large Intestine
5. Which tiny structures line the internal surface of the small intestine to increase
its surface area for the absorption of nutrients?
A. bile ducts
B. cilia
C. salivary glands
D. villi
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7. Which of the following is produced by the liver?
A. amylase
B. bile
C. pepsin
D. renin
11. What aids the passage of food through the digestive tract?
A. pull from the anus
B. chemical absorption
C. movement of the cilia
D. wavelike muscle contractions
13. Which of the following is the correct order of the digestive tract?
A. mouth → rectum → esophagus → rectum → anus → small intestine
→ large intestine
B. mouth → stomach → esophagus → rectum → anus → small intestine
→large intestine
C. mouth → esophagus → stomach → small intestine → large intestine
→ rectum → anus
D. mouth → esophagus → stomach → small intestine → anus
→ large intestine → rectum
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14. How do nutrients from digested food reach the blood?
A. by passing through the esophagus into the blood
B. by being absorbed into the blood through the blood vessels
C. by being absorbed into the blood through the walls of the lungs
D. by passing through the small intestine into the large intestine, then
into the blood
15. What will happen to the undigested food that pass through the digestive
tract?
A. goes to the pancreas to await disposal
B. enters to the stomach and await disposal
C. goes to small intestine and await disposal
D. moves down to the large intestine and await disposal
Additional Activities
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Additional Activity: What I Can Do
Activity 9. Now I Know! Activity 8. I Create You Gullet!
Scoring Rubric (per square)
2 points Discussions and illustrations are Scoring Rubric (per square)
complete with no misconception.
2 points Discussions and illustrations are complete
1 point Discussions and illustrations are with no misconception.
incomplete with minor
misconception. 1 point Discussions and illustrations are
incomplete with minor misconception.
0 point There is no discussion and
illustration shown 0 point There is no discussion and illustration
shown
What's More
What I Know
3. Absorption of nutrients passed Activity 4. Match Me!
1. B 2. D 3. E 1. D 6. C 11. B
the soluble food molecules in the
4. F 5. A 6. C 2. A 7. B 12. D
lining of the small intestine through
3. C 8. D 13. A
the villi.
Activity 5. I Fill You! 4. C 9. D 14. A
1.) 1. MOUTH 5. A 10. D 15. C
4. The villi and microvilli are
important because it increases the 2. ESOPHAGUS
What’s In
surface area for absorption of 3. STOMACH
Activity 1. Tummy Puzzle!
nutrients from the food that we ate. 4. SMALL INTESTINE
1. Mouth 8. Pancreas
5. LARGE INTESTINE 2. Tongue 9. Small intestine
5. The undigested food stored in 6. RECTUM 3. Teeth 10. Large intestine
the rectum called feces are pushed 7. ANUS
4. Saliva 11. Rectum
out of the body through the anus by 2.) Possible answers are 5. Pharynx 12. Anus
defecation. box 1: Amylase 6. Esophagus 13. Food
box 2: pepsin 7. Stomach 14. Liver
Activity 7. Gutsy word
box 3: Maltase, Lactase and 15. Gall bladder
peptidase, lipase What’s New
Down: Across:
1. Pancreas 2. Large 3.) It turns large fat droplets
Activity 2. A Gutsy Game
Intestine into smaller ones and stores
3. Ingestion 9. Gall Bladder them in the gall bladder. 1. The token represent the food
4. Liver 10. Rectum Activity 6. Share It! that was eaten.
5. Tongue 11. Anus Possible Answers/Key
7. Small Intestine 14. Bile 2. The boxes on the board game
terms: represents the different organs
8. Ileum 15. Amylase
1. When food, drink or any of digestive system.
12. Lipase 17. Duodenum substances enters into the
mouth. 3. The directions on some of the
13. Enzymes 19. Esophagus
boxes describe the physical and
16. Chyme
2. When food is in the chemical conditions that affect
18. Stomach proper functioning of digestive
mouth, stomach and small
system.
Assessment: intestine it will undergo
1. D 6. C 11. D mechanical and chemical Activity. 3 Pick Me Up!
2. A 7. B 12. C digestion that breaks down 1. B
3. D 8. C 13. C large insoluble food 2. C
4. A 9. D 14. B 3. E
molecules into smaller
5. D 10. B 15. D 4. F
water-soluble food 5. H
molecules for easy
absorption of the cells.
Answer Key
References
Digestive System. (2014, September 26). Retrieved from DepEd Learning Portal:
lrmds.deped.ph/pdf-view/6315
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