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Measurement. Can you name any objects in the room that are smaller than 1 centimeter? Why would you use millimeters instead of centimeters to measure?

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Presentation on theme: "Measurement. Can you name any objects in the room that are smaller than 1 centimeter? Why would you use millimeters instead of centimeters to measure?"— Presentation transcript:

1 Measurement

2 Can you name any objects in the room that are smaller than 1 centimeter? Why would you use millimeters instead of centimeters to measure? 10 millimetres = 1 centimetre Draw 1 millimeter on your paper using a ruler… what did you learn about millimeters from doing this? http://convertplus.com/en/conversion-length

3 Millimeters and Centimeters Complete page 1 and 2 in Student Booklet Complete page 64 in Student Workbook

4 Journal – Millimetres (mm) Complete page 3 in Student Booklet In our world what would we measure with the millimetre unit and why is this unit useful?

5 Millimetres, Centimetres and Metres Create large shapes on the floor using masking tape. Measure them by following your lines with string and then measuring the string using a metre stick. How would this measurement change if you used a different unit of measurement? m? cm? mm? Try each one!

6 Converting Units Millimetre (mm)Centimetre (cm)Metre (m) 1 mm0.1 cm0.001 m 10 mm1 cm0.01 m 100 mm10 cm0.1 m 1000 mm100 cm1 m

7 Converting Units Complete page 4 in your Student Booklet Remember that next day we will be taking a short walk around the community. Please remember to dress warm!

8 Walking 1 Kilometre 1 kilometre = 1 000 metres

9 Kilometres Distance from home to school Less than 1 kmMore than 1 kmAbout 1 km How far do you travel to get to school? Predict how many times you would walk around the school to travel 1 kilometre

10 Estimating Units of Measurement Which unit of measurement would you use to measure… The distance from the hospital to the school? The tip of your pinky finger? A pencil? A car? Millimetres (mm), centimetres (cm), metres(m) or kilometres (km)

11 Estimating Units of Measurement Complete Student Workbook page 65 Complete Mapping Activity in Student Booklet pages 6 – 8

12 Choosing the Right Unit Choose five parts of your body to trace Get a partner to trace you using pencil and chart paper Measure your body parts using the appropriate unit of measurement Record on page 9 in student booklet

13 Journal – Converting Units Complete page 10 in student booklet If you change metres to centimetres, will the numerical value become greater or less? Why?

14 Perimeter and Area- Rectangles http://www.amathsdictionaryforkids.com/dictionary.html Perimeter - The area around something ◦ Perimeter of a rectangle = l + l + w + w Area – the amount of space an object covers ◦ Area of a rectangle = length x width

15 Find the Perimeter Perimeter of a rectangle = 2l + 2w or 2 (l + w) Create as many rectangles as you can with a perimeter of 20 cm http://nlvm.usu.edu/en/nav/frames_asid_ 281_g_2_t_4.html?open=activities& from=topic_t_4.html Complete page 66 in student workbook

16 Find the Area Area of a rectangle = length x width Complete page 67 in student workbook

17 PIGS ROBERT MUNSCH http://robertmunsch.com/book/pigs Megan is told to feed the pigs, but not to open the gate. She does of course, and the results are hilarious as the pigs help themselves to coffee and the newspaper at the breakfast table, follow Megan to school, and ride home by way of the school bus.

18 Constructed Response - Area Complete the constructed response on page 11 of the student booklet A farmer has 100 m of fencing to make a pen for his pigs. He decides a rectangle would be the best shape. What are some possible sizes of pens he could make? How do the areas of the pens compare and what size they would recommend and why? What pen has the greatest area? What is special about this rectangle?

19 Find the perimeter and area of a classroom door, then come up with a concept for our “Spring” door. Draw your door and list all the necessary materials and their measurements. Write your name at the top and enter it into the teacher inbox to deicide our “Spring has Sprung” door!

20 MATH REVIEW Complete unit review on page 269 in textbook

21 Volume Volume – the amount of space occupied by a 3- dimensional object Measured in cubic centimetres (for small objects) and metres (for large objects) Volume of rectangular prism = length x width x height Complete page 68 in workbook l w h

22 Volume – Cubic Centimetres http://www.interactivestuff.org/sums4fun/3dboxe s.html http://www.interactivestuff.org/sums4fun/3dboxe s.html What is the volume of this rectangular prism? length x width x height

23 Volume – Cubic Centimetres Complete page 69 in workbook Complete journal entry page 14 of booklet How could you figure out how many cubes would fit in a box without filling it? Explain.

24 TOWERS ACTIVITY When finished complete page 15 in student booklet

25 Volume – Cubic Metres Complete page 70 in workbook Complete journal entry on page 15 in student booklet ◦ Name a 3-D object that could be measured using cubic centimetres and a 3-D object that would be measured in cubic metres and explain why?

26 Capacity Capacity is used for measuring liquids or the containers that hold those liquids It is measured using millilitres (ml)or litres (L) Order your containers from least to greatest… What did you notice?

27 Capacity

28 Capacity – Frayer Model

29 Capacity - Estimation Mr. Franklin filled a bucket with water to clean his floor. Does the bucket probably hold 9 litres of water or 9 millilitres of water? Explain. Complete page 72 in workbook This bottle is 1 L of water. A millilitre is about 20 drops of water.

30 Capacity - Conversion Complete page 17 of student booklet To convert from litres (L) to millilitres (ml) you must multiply by 1 000 1 L = 1 000 ml To convert from millilitres (ml) to litres (L) you must divide by 1 000 1 000 ml = 1 L

31 Journal Entry Complete page 18 in student booklet

32 Review Complete review page 19 – 21 in student booklet Play “Pour It!” in groups of 2-4 players


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