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Skeleton & Muscles

Human Body & Health: Skeleton & Muscles

Skeleton & Muscles

Skeleton & Muscles Basics

What you'll learn

  • Identify the skeleton as the framework supporting the body.
  • Name organs protected by the skull and ribcage.
  • Understand what joints and muscles do.
  • Relate healthy habits to strong bones and muscles.

Key concepts

Level 1 - Getting started

The skeleton is the framework of bones that supports our body and gives it shape.

Level 2 - Building the idea

The skull protects the brain. The ribcage protects the heart and lungs. The backbone (spine) supports the body and allows bending.

Level 3 - Going deeper

A joint is where two bones meet and allow movement — the knee is a hinge joint, the shoulder is a ball-and-socket joint. Muscles are attached to bones and move them by contracting and relaxing, usually working in pairs.

Level 4 - Indian context

Calcium-rich foods like milk and curd, along with regular exercise, keep bones and muscles strong. A doctor may use a plaster cast to hold a broken bone still while it heals. Wearing a helmet while cycling protects the skull from injury.

Worked example

Match bone to protection

Step 1 - List body parts: skull, ribcage, backbone.
Step 2 - Recall organ each protects or supports.
Step 3 - Match skull-brain, ribcage-heart/lungs, backbone-body support.
Step 4 - Write the three matches.
Answer: Skull protects brain; ribcage protects heart and lungs; backbone supports the body.

Bend your knee

Step 1 - Bend your knee and observe the movement.
Step 2 - Identify the two bones meeting at the knee.
Step 3 - Recall this type of joint is called a hinge joint.
Step 4 - State why a joint is needed here.
Answer: The knee joint lets the leg bend and straighten like a hinge.

Common mistakes

MistakeWhy it happensFix
Bones and muscles are thought to be the sameBoth are needed to moveBones form the frame; muscles pull bones to create movement
All joints move the same wayJoint types not comparedKnee (hinge) bends one way; shoulder (ball-and-socket) moves in many directions
Skeleton is thought to be only for standingProtection role missedSkeleton also protects organs like brain, heart, and lungs
Bone health is linked only to milkExercise role overlookedBoth calcium-rich food and regular exercise keep bones and muscles strong

Quick check

  • Which bones protect the brain?
  • What is a joint?
  • Name one hinge joint in your body.
  • Give one habit that keeps bones strong.
  • Stretch: List three joints you use while playing your favourite game and name the movement each one allows.

Revision tip: Skeleton supports and protects; joints allow movement; muscles pull bones to move them.

Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Skeleton & Muscles Basics.

Key Takeaways (TL;DR)

  • What you'll learn
  • Key concepts
  • Worked example
  • Common mistakes

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