Grades 6–8
Final Exam
Official
Science: Cells & Organisms: Final Exam Review
Free middle school life science practice on cells and organisms. Students review cell theory, organelle functions, and how cells form tissues, organs, and systems. Comprehensive review mixing skills from the whole unit. Use this set the week before a major test.
For teachers
Use after microscope lab work or as review before a life science unit test on cell structure.
Learning support
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Study guide
# Final Exam Review Guide
Comprehensive review mixing skills from the whole unit. Use this set the week before a major test.
## Unit checklist
Work through every section below, then take the final exam quiz.
# Cell Theory
All living things are made of cells. Cells are the basic unit of life. New cells come from existing cells. Cells may be prokaryotic (no nucleus) or eukaryotic (with a nucleus and membrane-bound organelles).
# Plant and Animal Cells
Both have a nucleus, mitochondria, ribosomes, and a cell membrane. Plant cells also have a rigid cell wall and chloroplasts for photosynthesis. Large central vacuoles store water in plant cells.
# Organelle Functions
The nucleus controls cell activities and stores DNA. Mitochondria produce energy (ATP). Ribosomes build proteins. The endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi apparatus process and ship materials. Lysosomes break down waste.
# Levels of Organization
Cells form tissues, tissues form organs, organs form systems, and systems form organisms. Each level has emergent properties. Unicellular organisms carry out all life functions in one cell.
FAQ
- Are prokaryotes covered?
- Cell theory mentions prokaryotes and eukaryotes, with emphasis on eukaryotic plant and animal cells.
- Does this connect to human body systems?
- Yes. The levels of organization section bridges cell biology to organs and systems taught in grade 7 and 8.