Learning Objectives for This Lesson
- Connect layer counting to
- Apply the formula to rectangular prisms
- Explain why
equals - Recognize that volume is additive
- Decompose composite figures for total volume
Quick Review: Counting Unit Cubes
From your earlier lessons (5.MD.C.3 and 5.MD.C.4):
- Volume measures the space inside a solid figure
- We measure volume by packing unit cubes with no gaps
- Units: cubic centimeters, cubic inches, cubic feet
Today's big question: Can we find volume without counting every cube?
Building a Prism Layer by Layer
Each layer has the same number of cubes — just multiply!
Layers Reveal a Multiplication Pattern
| l | w | h | Layer | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3 | 2 | 1 | 6 | 6 |
| 3 | 2 | 2 | 6 | 12 |
| 3 | 2 | 3 | 6 | 18 |
Total = layer × layers
The Volume Formula: A Counting Shortcut
- Length × Width = cubes in one layer (area of the base)
- × Height = total cubes in all layers
Every time you use this formula, you are counting cubes!
Your Turn: Apply the Volume Formula
A prism: 5 units long, 4 wide, 2 tall.
Step 1: Cubes in one layer? 5 × 4 = ?
Step 2: Number of layers? 2
Step 3: Total volume = ? cubic units
Try it, then advance for the answer.
Check Your Answer and Discover Something
What does 5 × 4 give us on its own?
- The area of the base:
square units - So
Two Equivalent Formulas for Finding Volume
Formula 1:
Formula 2:
Group
Same Prism, Three Orientations, Same Volume
No matter which face is the "base," the volume is always 72 cubic units.
Example: Base Area Given Directly
A prism has a base area of 15 square inches and a height of 7 inches. What is its volume?
Solution:
We didn't need
Quick Check: Find the Base Area
What is
If the height is 5 cm, what is the volume?
Think, then advance for the answer.
From Formulas to Real-World Problems
You now have two powerful volume formulas:
Next: Let's use them to solve real-world problems — finding volume, finding a missing dimension, and comparing two boxes.
Problem: How Much Fits Inside?
A toy chest is 4 ft long, 2 ft wide, and 2 ft tall. What is its volume?
Solution:
The toy chest holds 16 cubic feet of toys.
Working Backward to Find Missing Dimensions
A garden bed holds 48 cubic feet. It is 8 ft long and 2 ft wide.
The soil is 3 feet deep.
Problem: Which Tank Holds More?
Tank A: 12 × 8 × 10 inches
Tank B: 15 × 6 × 9 inches
Tank A holds 150 cubic inches more than Tank B.
Practice: Find and Compare Prism Volumes
Label all answers with cubic units.
- Shipping box: 10 × 6 × 4 in. Volume?
- Container: 120 cu cm, base 10 × 3 cm. Height?
- Box A: 7 × 5 × 4. Box B: 6 × 8 × 3. Greater?
Try all three, then advance.
Answers: Volumes and Missing Dimensions Revealed
cubic inches , so cm ; — Box B wins by 4 cubic units
Always label with cubic units!
What About Shapes Like This?
Can we use
No — it isn't a single rectangular prism.
But we can break it into two rectangular prisms, find each volume, and add.
This works because volume is additive.
Volume Is Additive: The L-Shape
- Break the L-shape into two non-overlapping prisms
- Find each volume separately, then add
- The two prisms must not overlap — no double counting!
Decomposition A: Splitting with a Horizontal Cut
Prism 1 (bottom): 6 × 2 × 2 = 24 cubic cm
Prism 2 (right): 3 × 2 × 2 = 12 cubic cm
Decomposition B: Same Shape, Different Cut
Prism 1 (left): 3 × 4 × 2 = 24 cubic cm
Prism 2 (right): 3 × 2 × 2 = 12 cubic cm
Same total! Different cuts always give the same volume.
Real-World Problem: A Concrete Patio
Longer section: 10 × 4 × 1 ft = 40 cubic ft
Shorter section: 6 × 3 × 1 ft = 18 cubic ft
Your Turn: Decompose This T-Shape
- Top bar: 8 × 2 × 3 cm
- Vertical stem: 2 × 4 × 3 cm
Step 1: Find the volume of the top bar.
Step 2: Find the volume of the stem.
Step 3: Add for the total.
Try it, then advance for the answer.
Answer: Computing the T-Shape Total Volume
Top bar:
Stem:
Circle each prism's dimensions before multiplying!
Key Takeaways from Today's Lesson
✓
✓
✓ Composite: decompose, compute, add
Area is flat. Volume is filled — don't forget
Match dimensions to their own prism first.
What Comes Next in Grade Six
You've learned:
- Volume formulas for rectangular prisms
- Additive volume for composite figures
Coming up:
- Volume with fractional edge lengths (6.G.A.2)
- Surface area of 3D figures (6.G.A.4)
extends to new base shapes!
Click to begin the narrated lesson
Relate volume to the operations of multiplication and addition and solve real world and mathematical problems involving volume