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Nuffield Free-Standing Mathematics Activity Volume

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Nuffield Free-Standing Mathematics Activity Volume. Volume. The containers for these products are all cuboids. Companies need to know how much containers like these can hold. This activity is about finding the volume of a variety of cuboids like these. 1 cm. 1 mm. 1 mm. 1 cm. 1 mm. 1 cm. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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© Nuffield Foundation 2011 Nuffield Free-Standing Mathematics Activity Volume
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Page 1: Nuffield Free-Standing Mathematics Activity Volume

© Nuffield Foundation 2011

Nuffield Free-Standing Mathematics Activity

Volume

Page 2: Nuffield Free-Standing Mathematics Activity Volume

Volume

The containers for these products are all cuboids.

This activity is about finding the volume of a variety of cuboids like these.

Companies need to know how much containers like these can hold.

Page 3: Nuffield Free-Standing Mathematics Activity Volume

1 cm

1 cm

1 cm 1 mm

1 mm

1 mm

The volume of a shape is the amount of space it fills.

1 m

1 cubic metre

1 m3 1mm3

1 m

1 m

1 cm3

Volume

Page 4: Nuffield Free-Standing Mathematics Activity Volume

Volume = length × width × height

Volume = 4 × 2 × 3

4 cm

3 cm

2 cm

Volume = 24 cm3

Volume = area of cross-section x length

Volume of a cuboid

Page 5: Nuffield Free-Standing Mathematics Activity Volume

For a cuboid Volume = length × width × height

or Volume = area of cross-section x length

Volume of the fish tankExample

60 cm

120 cm50 cm

Volume = 120 × 50 × 60

= 120 × 3000

= 360 000 cm3

Capacity in litres = 360 000 ÷ 1000

= 360 litres(1 litre = 1000 cm3)

Page 6: Nuffield Free-Standing Mathematics Activity Volume

Example Concrete block

10 cm

2.5 m12 cm

Volume = 250 × 12 × 10

= 2500 × 12

Volume = 30 000 cm3

= 250 cm

For a cuboid Volume = length × width × height

or Volume = area of cross-section x length

Think about…Think about…Why might there be a problem with these dimensions?

Page 7: Nuffield Free-Standing Mathematics Activity Volume

Volume = 0.6 m3

Example Sand in sandpit

20 cm

2 m1.5 m

Volume = 2 × 1.5 × 0.2

= 3 × 0.2

= 0.2m

= 0.6

For a cuboid Volume = length × width × height

or Volume = area of cross-section x length

Think about…Think about…Which dimension should be converted?

Page 8: Nuffield Free-Standing Mathematics Activity Volume

Reflect on your work

A manufacturer needs to know the volume of a box (cuboid). Explain how to find this.

What units can volume be measured in?

Volume

Suggest dimensions that you could use to make a carton with a volume of 1 litre (1000 cm³).


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