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Sense Organs

Human Body: Sense Organs

Sense Organs

Sense Organs

What you'll learn

  • The five sense organs: eyes, ears, nose, tongue, and skin.
  • Each sense organ detects a different kind of information from the surroundings.
  • Caring for sense organs to keep them healthy.
  • NCERT Looking Around 5 — sensing the world around us.

Key concepts

Level 1 — The five senses

Verbal: Each sense organ sends messages to the brain, which understands what we see, hear, smell, taste, or touch.

Sense organSenseWhat it detects
EyesSightLight, colour, shapes
EarsHearingSounds
NoseSmellOdours
TongueTasteSweet, sour, salty, bitter
SkinTouchPressure, heat, cold, pain

NCERT link: Sense organs help us respond safely and quickly to our surroundings.

Level 2 — Caring for sense organs

Verbal: Sense organs are delicate and need protection and care.

Real-life: Reading in dim light strains eyes; loud music can damage hearing; hot food can burn the tongue.

Sense organCare tip
EyesRead in good light; avoid staring at bright screens too long
EarsAvoid loud noise; do not insert sharp objects
NoseAvoid strong irritants and smoke
TongueAvoid very hot food/drinks
SkinKeep clean; protect from sunburn and cuts

Worked example

Why do we quickly pull our hand back from a hot pan?

Step 1 — Skin senses heat and pain.
Step 2 — This message rushes to the brain.
Step 3 — Brain sends a fast signal to pull the hand back.
Answer: Skin (touch) protects us from injury through a quick response.

Why can't we taste food properly with a blocked nose?

Step 1 — Taste and smell work together to give the full "flavour" of food.
Step 2 — A blocked nose reduces smell input.
Answer: Flavour perception weakens when smell is blocked, even though the tongue still senses basic tastes.

Common mistakes

MistakeWhy it happensFix
Only eyes and ears are sense organsOverlooking othersNose, tongue, and skin are also sense organs
Tongue detects smellConfusing taste and smellTongue detects taste; nose detects smell
Skin only feels touchIgnoring other rolesSkin also senses heat, cold, and pain
Sense organs work without the brainMissing the connectionAll senses send signals to the brain to be understood

Quick check

  • Name the five sense organs and what each detects.
  • Why do we pull our hand away quickly from something hot?
  • Give one care tip each for eyes and ears.
  • Stretch: Why does food taste dull when you have a cold?

Revision tip: Make a table linking each sense organ to one daily example (e.g., ears — hearing the school bell).

Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Sense Organs.

Key Takeaways (TL;DR)

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

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