Search Header Logo
  1. Resource Library
  2. Science
  3. Biology
  4. Human Body
  5. The Human Body [skin]
The Human Body [Skin]

The Human Body [Skin]

Assessment

Presentation

Science

5th Grade

Practice Problem

Easy

NGSS
MS-ESS1-1, MS-ESS1-2, MS-ESS1-3

+5

Standards-aligned

Created by

R Menard

Used 2+ times

FREE Resource

9 Slides • 1 Question

1

  • Epidermis

  • Melanin

  • Dermis

  • Pore

  • Follicle

  • Cancer

Vocabulary

  • What are the functions and the structures of your skin?

  • What habits can help keep your skin healthy?

Key Concepts

The Skin

2

Open Ended

What is the largest organ in the body?

3

Answer:

If your answer is the skin, you are right! If an adult's skin were stretched out flat, it would cover an area larger than 1.5 square meters, which is about the size of a mattress on a twin bed. You may think of the skin as nothing more than a covering that separates the inside of the body from the outside environment. If so, you'll be surprised to learn about the many important roles that the skin plays.

4

Discover Activity

What Can You Observe About Skin?

  1. Using a magnifying glass, examine the skin on your hand. Look for pores and hairs on both the palm and the back of your hand.

  2. Discuss your observations

5

The Body's Tough Covering

The Skin Performs Several Major Functions in the Body

The skin covers and protects the body from injury, infection, and water loss. The skin also helps regulate body temperature, eliminate wastes, gather information about the environment, and produce vitamin D.

6

The skin protects the body by forming a barrier that keeps disease-causing microorganisms and harmful substances outside the body. In addition, the skin helps keep important substances inside the body. Like plastic wrap that keeps food from drying out, the skin prevents the loss of important fluids such as water.

​Protecting the Body

7

Another function of the skin is to help the body maintain a steady temperature. Many blood vessels run throughout the skin. When you become too warm, these blood vessels enlarge and the amount of blood that flows through them increases. These changes allow heat to move from your body into the outside environment. In addition, sweat glands in the skin respond to excess heat by producing perspiration. As perspiration evaporates from your skin, your skin is cooled.

Maintaining Temperature

8

Perspiration contains dissolved waste materials that come from the breakdown of chemicals during cellular processes. Thus, your skin is also helping to eliminate wastes whenever you perspire. For example, some of the wastes that come from the breakdown of proteins are eliminated in perspiration.

Eliminating Wastes

9

The skin also gathers information about the environment. To understand how the skin does this, place your fingertips on the skin of your arm and press down firmly. Then lightly pinch yourself. You have just tested some of the nerves in your skin. The nerves in skin provide information about such things as pressure, pain, and temperature. Pain messages are important because they warn you that something in your surroundings may have injured you

Gathering Information

10

Lastly, some of the skin cells produce vitamin D in the presence of sunlight. Vitamin D is important for healthy bones because it helps the cells in your digestive system to absorb the calcium in your food. Your skin cells need only a few minutes of sunlight to produce all the vitamin D you need in a day.

Producing Vitamin D

  • Epidermis

  • Melanin

  • Dermis

  • Pore

  • Follicle

  • Cancer

Vocabulary

  • What are the functions and the structures of your skin?

  • What habits can help keep your skin healthy?

Key Concepts

The Skin

Show answer

Auto Play

Slide 1 / 10

SLIDE