Homeostasis and Response
KS4BI-KS4-D005
The regulation of internal conditions in the human body. Covers the nervous system including reflex arcs, the endocrine system including hormones and their target organs, blood glucose regulation, thermoregulation, water balance and the menstrual cycle.
National Curriculum context
Homeostasis and Response develops the concept of negative feedback as a fundamental control mechanism in biology, requiring pupils to understand how the body maintains a stable internal environment despite external changes. The DfE subject content requires pupils to understand the nervous system from receptor to effector, to explain the reflex arc as a rapid automatic response, and to compare nervous and hormonal communication. Detailed content is required on the roles of insulin and glucagon in blood glucose control, ADH in water balance, and the hormones of the menstrual cycle. The separate sciences specification additionally requires understanding of plant responses including auxin, gibberellins and ethene. This domain provides important links to real-world health contexts including diabetes, IVF and drug therapies.
2
Concepts
2
Clusters
4
Prerequisites
2
With difficulty levels
Lesson Clusters
Describe the nervous system and explain reflex arc responses
introduction CuratedThe nervous system and reflex arcs introduce the neural control pathway that underpins all rapid homeostatic responses; it establishes the receptor-coordinator-effector model used throughout this domain.
Explain blood glucose regulation and the role of hormones in diabetes
practice CuratedBlood glucose regulation by insulin and glucagon is the prime GCSE example of hormonal homeostasis; its clinical context (Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes) provides real-world relevance.
Teaching Suggestions (1)
Study units and activities that deliver concepts in this domain.
Reaction Time Investigation
Science Enquiry Fair TestPedagogical rationale
The ruler drop test is an accessible, low-cost investigation that generates quantitative data with inherent variability — making it ideal for teaching statistical thinking at GCSE level. Calculating mean and range from repeat measurements, identifying anomalies, and drawing error bars develops the data handling skills that examiners specifically test. The biological context connects the abstract concept of reflex arcs to measurable, personal experience.
Prerequisites
Concepts from other domains that pupils should know before this domain.
Concepts (2)
Nervous System and Reflex Arcs
knowledge AI DirectBI-KS4-C012
The nervous system consists of the central nervous system (brain and spinal cord) and the peripheral nervous system. Sensory neurons carry electrical impulses from receptors to the CNS; motor neurons carry impulses from CNS to effectors. A reflex arc is a rapid, automatic response pathway: receptor → sensory neuron → relay neuron → motor neuron → effector.
Teaching guidance
Draw and annotate a reflex arc diagram. Pupils should be able to trace the pathway of an impulse in both a spinal reflex (e.g., withdrawing from pain) and a cranial reflex (e.g., pupil light reflex). Explain why reflex responses are faster than voluntary responses — they do not pass through conscious areas of the brain. Required Practical: investigate the effect of a factor on human reaction time.
Common misconceptions
Students often draw reflex arcs without the relay neuron in the spinal cord. Students also think reflexes require conscious thought — emphasise that the defining feature of a reflex is that it does not involve the conscious brain. Students confuse effectors (muscles and glands that carry out the response) with receptors (which detect the stimulus).
Difficulty levels
Knows that the brain and nerves control the body and that reflexes are fast automatic responses, but cannot draw or describe a reflex arc accurately.
Example task
What are the three types of neuron in a reflex arc, and what does each do?
Model response: Sensory neurons carry electrical impulses from receptors (e.g., in the skin) to the central nervous system. Relay neurons connect sensory and motor neurons within the spinal cord. Motor neurons carry impulses from the CNS to effectors (muscles or glands).
Can draw and label a reflex arc diagram, explain why reflexes are faster than voluntary responses, and describe how synapses work using neurotransmitters.
Example task
Draw a labelled diagram of the reflex arc for a person touching a hot plate and withdrawing their hand.
Model response: Receptor (pain receptor in skin) → sensory neuron → synapse → relay neuron (in spinal cord) → synapse → motor neuron → effector (muscle in arm contracts, pulling hand away). The impulse does not travel to the brain for conscious processing, which is why it is faster than a voluntary response.
Explains synaptic transmission in detail (including neurotransmitter release, diffusion and receptor binding), compares nervous and hormonal communication, and designs reaction time experiments.
Example task
Compare nervous and hormonal communication in the body. Give one example of each.
Model response: Nervous communication uses electrical impulses along neurons. It is fast (milliseconds), short-lived, and targets specific effectors via the neural pathway. Example: the reflex arc when touching something hot. Hormonal communication uses chemical messengers (hormones) transported in the blood. It is slower (seconds to minutes), longer-lasting, and affects target organs with specific receptors. Example: insulin released by the pancreas travels in the blood to the liver and muscle cells to reduce blood glucose. Both systems work together to coordinate body functions.
Analyses how drugs affect synaptic transmission, evaluates the role of the brain in processing information, and applies understanding of the nervous system to clinical contexts such as anaesthesia and neurological conditions.
Example task
Explain how some recreational drugs affect the nervous system at the synapse. Use a specific example.
Model response: SSRI antidepressants (e.g., fluoxetine) block the reuptake of serotonin from the synaptic cleft. Normally, after serotonin binds to receptors on the post-synaptic membrane and triggers an impulse, it is reabsorbed by the pre-synaptic neuron (reuptake) and recycled. SSRIs block the transporter proteins that reabsorb serotonin, so it remains in the synaptic cleft for longer, continuing to stimulate the post-synaptic neuron. This increases serotonergic activity in the brain, which can alleviate symptoms of depression. Conversely, substances like curare (used in some anaesthetics) block acetylcholine receptors at the neuromuscular junction, preventing muscle contraction and causing paralysis. These examples show that drugs can either enhance or inhibit synaptic transmission by acting on different components of the synapse.
Delivery rationale
Secondary science knowledge concept — factual/theoretical content with clear misconceptions to diagnose.
Blood Glucose Regulation and Diabetes
process AI FacilitatedBI-KS4-C013
Blood glucose concentration is monitored and regulated by the pancreas through the hormones insulin and glucagon. When blood glucose is too high, beta cells secrete insulin, causing cells to take up glucose and the liver to convert glucose to glycogen. When blood glucose is too low, alpha cells secrete glucagon, causing glycogen to be broken down to glucose. Type 1 diabetes is caused by autoimmune destruction of beta cells; type 2 is caused by insulin resistance.
Teaching guidance
Use annotated feedback diagrams to show the negative feedback loops for both high and low blood glucose. Pupils should understand that insulin and glucagon are antagonistic hormones. Connect to diet, obesity and lifestyle risk factors for type 2 diabetes. Treatment: type 1 requires insulin injections or pump; type 2 can be managed with diet and exercise, sometimes with medication.
Common misconceptions
Students confuse type 1 (no insulin produced) with type 2 (cells do not respond to insulin). Students think insulin lowers blood glucose by 'destroying' glucose — clarify it promotes glucose uptake by cells and glycogen synthesis in the liver. Students also confuse glucagon with glucose.
Difficulty levels
Knows that insulin is involved in controlling blood sugar and that diabetes is related to blood sugar problems, but confuses the roles of insulin and glucagon and the two types of diabetes.
Example task
What does insulin do in the body?
Model response: When blood glucose is too high (e.g., after a meal), the pancreas releases insulin. Insulin causes cells to take up glucose from the blood and causes the liver to convert glucose to glycogen for storage, reducing blood glucose levels.
Can explain the negative feedback loop involving insulin and glucagon, and can distinguish between type 1 and type 2 diabetes including their causes and treatments.
Example task
Explain the difference between type 1 and type 2 diabetes.
Model response: Type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune condition where the immune system destroys the beta cells of the pancreas, so no insulin is produced. It usually develops in childhood and is treated with insulin injections. Type 2 diabetes develops when body cells become resistant to insulin (they no longer respond to it) or when the pancreas does not produce enough insulin. It is linked to obesity and lifestyle factors and is treated with diet, exercise and sometimes medication.
Draws and explains the negative feedback loop for blood glucose regulation, interprets blood glucose data, and evaluates the risk factors for type 2 diabetes.
Example task
Draw and explain the negative feedback loop that maintains blood glucose concentration at a set point.
Model response: When blood glucose rises (e.g., after eating): the pancreas detects this → beta cells secrete insulin → insulin causes liver cells to convert glucose to glycogen (glycogenesis) and causes body cells to increase glucose uptake → blood glucose falls back to normal. When blood glucose falls (e.g., during exercise): the pancreas detects this → alpha cells secrete glucagon → glucagon causes liver cells to convert glycogen back to glucose (glycogenolysis) and release it into the blood → blood glucose rises back to normal. This is negative feedback because the response (insulin or glucagon) opposes the original change, returning the system to the set point.
Analyses clinical blood glucose data to diagnose diabetes type, evaluates the public health challenge of type 2 diabetes, and explains the molecular mechanisms of insulin resistance.
Example task
A patient's blood glucose results show: fasting level 8.2 mmol/L (normal <5.5), 2 hours after glucose drink: 14.1 mmol/L (normal <7.8). The patient's insulin levels are normal. What type of diabetes is likely, and why?
Model response: Both fasting and post-meal glucose levels are significantly elevated, indicating diabetes. Since insulin levels are normal, the pancreas is producing insulin but the body's cells are not responding to it effectively. This pattern is consistent with type 2 diabetes, where insulin resistance means cells have reduced numbers of insulin receptors or defective receptor signalling pathways. In type 1 diabetes, insulin levels would be very low or absent because beta cells have been destroyed. The patient should be advised about lifestyle modifications (increased physical activity, dietary changes to reduce refined carbohydrate intake, weight management if overweight), as these can improve insulin sensitivity. If lifestyle changes are insufficient, metformin may be prescribed — it works by increasing cellular sensitivity to insulin and reducing glucose production by the liver.
Delivery rationale
Science process concept — enquiry methodology benefits from structured AI guidance with facilitator.