Lesson 3Measuring with Different-Sized Units

Learning Goal

Let’s measure things.

Learning Targets

  • When I know a measurement in one unit, I can decide whether it takes more or less of a different unit to measure the same quantity.

Warm Up: Width of a Paper

Problem 1

Your teacher will show you two rods. Does it take more green rods or blue rods lined up end to end to measure the width of a piece of printer paper?

Activity 1: Measurement Stations

Problem 1

Station 1

  • Each large cube is 1 cubic inch. Count how many cubic inches completely pack the box without gaps.

  • Each small cube is 1 cubic centimeter. Each rod is composed of 10 cubic centimeters. Count how many cubic centimeters completely fill the box.

cubic inches

cubic centimeters

volume of the box

Station 2

Your teacher showed you a length.

  • Use the meter stick to measure the length to the nearest meter.

  • Use a ruler to measure the length to the nearest foot.

meters

feet

length of

Station 3

If not using real water, open this applet.

  • Count how many times you can fill the quart bottle from the gallon jug.

  • Count how many times you can fill the liter bottle from the gallon jug.

quarts

liters

1 gallon of water

Station 4

Use the applet to record the weights of different objects in different units.

  • Select 2–3 different objects to measure on the scale.

  • Record the weights in ounces, pounds, grams, and kilograms.

object

ounces

pounds

grams

kilograms

Station 5

  • Count how many level teaspoons of salt fill the graduated cylinder to 20 milliliters, 40 milliliters, and 50 milliliters.

  • Pour the salt back into the original container.

milliliters

teaspoons

small amount of salt

medium amount of salt

large amount of salt

Print Version

Station 1

  • Each large cube is 1 cubic inch. Count how many cubic inches completely pack the box without gaps.

  • Each small cube is 1 cubic centimeter. Each rod is composed of 10 cubic centimeters. Count how many cubic centimeters completely fill the box.

cubic inches

cubic centimeters

volume of the box

Station 2

Your teacher showed you a length.

  • Use the meter stick to measure the length to the nearest meter.

  • Use a ruler to measure the length to the nearest foot.

meters

feet

length of

Station 3

If not using real water, open the digital applet.

  • Count how many times you can fill the quart bottle from the gallon jug.

  • Count how many times you can fill the liter bottle from the gallon jug.

quarts

liters

1 gallon of water

Station 4

If not using a real scale, open the digital applet.

  • Select 2–3 different objects to measure on the scale.

  • Record the weights in ounces, pounds, grams, and kilograms.

object

ounces

pounds

grams

kilograms

Station 5

  • Count how many level teaspoons of salt fill the graduated cylinder to 20 milliliters, 40 milliliters, and 50 milliliters.

  • Pour the salt back into the original container.

milliliters

teaspoons

small amount of salt

medium amount of salt

large amount of salt

After you finish all five stations, answer these questions with your group.

Problem 2

  1. Which is larger, a cubic inch or a cubic centimeter?

  2. Did more cubic inches or cubic centimeters fit in the cardboard box? Why?

Problem 3

Did it take more feet or meters to measure the indicated length? Why?

Problem 4

Which is larger, a quart or a liter? Explain your reasoning.

Problem 5

Use the data from Station 4 to put the units of weight and mass in order from smallest to largest. Explain your reasoning.

Problem 6

  1. About how many teaspoons of salt would it take to fill the graduated cylinder to 100 milliliters?

  2. If you poured 15 teaspoons of salt into an empty graduated cylinder, about how many milliliters would it fill?

  3. How many milliliters per teaspoon are there?

  4. How many teaspoons per milliliter are there?

Are you ready for more?

Problem 1

People in the medical field use metric measurements when working with medicine. For example, a doctor might prescribe medication in 10 mg tablets.

Brainstorm a list of reasons why healthcare workers would do this. Organize your thinking so it can be followed by others.

Lesson Summary

The size of the unit we use to measure something affects the measurement.

If we measure the same quantity with different units, it will take more of the smaller unit and fewer of the larger unit to express the measurement. For example, a room that measures 4 yards in length will measure 12 feet.

A pair of tape diagrams for one quantity. The top tape diagram has 4 equal parts and the bottom tape diagram has 12 equal parts.

There are 3 feet in a yard, so one foot is of a yard.

  • It takes 3 times as many feet to measure the same length as it does with yards.

  • It takes as many yards to measure the same length as it does with feet.