In this lesson:
By the end of this lesson, you will:
Can we use flat squares to measure the space inside a box?
Flat squares cover surfaces. To measure space inside a solid, we need a three-dimensional tool.
Sort: volume or area only?
Solid figures have volume. Flat shapes have area only.
Always say cubic units, not square units.
We know what volume is and what tool we use.
Next question: How do we count unit cubes to find volume?
Let's build some figures and find out.
3 cubes long × 2 cubes wide × 1 cube tall = 6 cubic units
The volume of a 3 × 2 × 2 prism is 12 cubic units.
Figure A: Prism with a cube missing in the middle → Gap — volume would be undercounted
Figure B: Prism with an extra cube stacked on another → Overlap — volume would be overcounted
How would you fix each one?
A figure: 4 long, 2 wide, 3 tall.
Count it up, then advance for the answer.
Figure 1: 2 × 2 × 2 cube Figure 2: 5 × 1 × 1 row Figure 3: L-shape from a 3 × 2 × 1 and a 1 × 2 × 1
Count cubes. Write answers in cubic units.
Figure 1: 2 × 2 × 2 = 8 cubic units Figure 2: 5 × 1 × 1 = 5 cubic units Figure 3: 6 + 2 = 8 cubic units
Always label your volume in cubic units.
We use volume in everyday life:
If you can fill it, you can measure its volume.
Box A holds exactly 24 unit cubes → volume = 24 cubic units Box B holds exactly 36 unit cubes → volume = 36 cubic units
A toy box: 5 cubes long, 3 wide, 2 tall.
Is the volume closer to 10 or 30 cubic units?
Estimate first, then calculate to check.
Box X: 4 × 4 × 1 = 16 cubic units (short and wide) Box Y: 2 × 2 × 3 = 12 cubic units (tall and narrow)
The shorter box has more volume!
Volume depends on all three dimensions — not just height.
Area = covering a surface. Volume = filling a space.
Solve each. Answers on the next slide.
Every answer includes "cubic units"!
✓ Volume measures space inside a solid figure ✓ A unit cube = one cubic unit of volume ✓ Pack with no gaps, no overlaps ✓ Report in cubic units, not square units
Count ALL cubes, not just visible ones Taller does not always mean more volume
Next: 5.MD.C.4 — Measuring with specific units
Next time, you'll measure volume with real units!