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Unit 4. SIMPLE MEASURES

2. Homepage . IntroductionExercise 1: What is its mass Exercise 2: How are size, shape, and the material an object is made of related to its mass? Exercise 3: How is Volume Related to Shape? Suggested Reading

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Unit 4. SIMPLE MEASURES

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    1. 1 Unit 4. SIMPLE MEASURES*

    2. 2 Homepage Introduction Exercise 1: What is its mass Exercise 2: How are size, shape, and the material an object is made of related to its mass? Exercise 3: How is Volume Related to Shape? Suggested Reading & Links

    3. 3 Introduction Have you ever been measured? At your doctors office, you have probably been measured to determine your height and weight. Have you ever measured anything? At the grocery store you may have measured fruits and vegetables to determine how much you will pay for them. Scientists measure things often. In order to compare the performance of objects of interest, they must know how similar or different they are.

    4. 4 Measuring answers questions such as: Which one weighs more? Which one takes up more space? There are many different ways to measure an object.

    5. 5 The Student will Learn about mass/weight (Exercise 1), Learn how size, shape and material type affect mass (Exercise 2) Learn about volume and its relationship to shape (Exercise 3).

    6. 6 Materials List Graduated cylinder Beaker Container filled with rice (monkey sticker) Funnel Volume relationship set: plastic cube, rectangular box, cone, pyramid, cylinder and sphere (giraffe sticker). Balance Box containing packing peanuts (zebra sticker).

    7. 7 Materials cont Box of miscellaneous items such as hickory nuts, string, acorns, spiny seed pod, stone, cotton ball, feather, paper clips, noodles, plastic cap, felt pad, hexagonal weight, metal washer (spider sticker) Box with 40 circular discs (tiger sticker) Box with plastic square weights: 4 1g yellow weights, 2 5g orange weights, 1 10g purple weight, 1 20g pink weight (male lion sticker) Box with six calibration standard weights: 1g, 2g, 5g, 10g, 20g and 50g (cat family)

    8. 8 Exercise 1: What is its mass? What is its mass? = How much does it weigh? The weight of an object is called its MASS. Determining an objects mass allows you to answer questions like: How much does it weigh? Which weighs more? How much weight did the object gain or lose from one time to the next? Do objects of the same type have the same weight?

    9. 9 Objective The goal of this exercise is to determine the weight/mass of a ring weight from the box with the tiger sticker on it.

    10. 10 Directions TO BEGIN. You will need: Balance (provided) Box with tiger sticker on lid Box with lion sticker on lid Note: This balance will not give a numerical value of how much an object weighs or what its mass is. However, you can balance an object of unknown mass to a series of objects of known mass in determining the mass of the object in question.

    11. 11 To ensure that the rings in the tiger sticker box weigh the same, the teacher should Have a student take two rings out of the box and place one ring on one tray of the balance and the other on the other tray. If the two trays balance (are level with one another), then the two rings are of equal mass. Other students might take additional rings from the box and repeat this comparison to ensure that the rings are all of the same mass.

    12. 12 Next find the box with the male lion sticker on it. Place one ring from the tiger box and one square purple weight from the male lion box on a table in front of the class. Have the students vote on which item looks as though it will weigh more or have more mass. Now you are ready to pass a pair of the two weights around the class so that each student has the opportunity to hold a ring weight in one hand and a square purple weight in the other hand. Have a vote on which object feels heavier?

    13. 13 Have a volunteer place a square purple weight on the left tray of the balance and a ring weight on the right side of the balance. Note: If one object is heavier than the other is, the balance will be lop-sided and the heavier object will weigh its side of the balance down. Repeat this procedure with the ring weight on the left side of the balance and the purple square weight on the right side.

    14. 14 Determine how many rings from the tiger box are needed to equal the mass of the purple weight from the male lion box. A volunteer will place the square purple weight on one side of the balance He/she will add rings to the other side until the class agrees that the two sides of the balance are level (at the same height).

    15. 15 Question 2. How many rings did you use? STOP!!! Answer is next!

    16. 16 Repeat the same procedures for the orange weight in the male lion box.

    17. 17 Question 4. How many ring weights equal a square orange weight? To answer this question, have a student volunteer add ring weights to that side of the balance until the pans are at equal height. STOP!!! Answer is next!

    18. 18 Question 5. Judging from how many rings you used to equal the masses of square purple and square orange weights, what conclusions can you make about the mass of each square weight relative to that of the ring weight? STOP!!! Answer is next!

    19. 19 Question 6. What is the relative mass of the square purple weight and the square orange weight if 10 rings are equal to one square purple weight and 5 rings are needed to balance one square orange weight?

    20. 20 Repeat the same procedures for the yellow weight in the male lion box.

    21. 21 Thus far, you have been determining the relative weights or masses of objects. Balances or scales have sets of standard weights associated with them. These weights are of known mass and are used to calibrate the scale (adjust the mechanism to ensure that it provides an accurate weight). We can use these standard weights to determine the absolute mass of a single weight, that of the ring. Find the calibration/standard weights in the box with the cat family sticker on it. Have volunteers try each standard weight versus a single ring weight on the balance until one is found that makes the two pans of the scale level.

    22. 22

    23. 23 Question 8. What is the mass of a ring weight? STOP!!! Answer is next!

    24. 24 Question 10. What is the mass of the purple square weight? STOP!!! Answer is next!

    25. 25 Exercise 2: How are size, shape, and the material an object is made of related to its mass? Often, you judge how much mass an object has by its size (how BIG or small it is). For example, you think of a refrigerator weighing more than a toaster. You may also guess that the purple square from the male lion box is heavier than the orange square in Exercise 1, because it appears to be taller than the orange square.

    26. 26 Size can often be used as an indication of mass, but sometimes appearance can be deceiving. This is because the material an object is made out of also influences its mass. Materials have different densities, a measure of how tightly the particles making up the material are packed together in a given space. If the particles are packed loosely, the density of the material is low and the object is light as in a paper plate If the particles are packed tightly, the density of the material is high and the object is heavy as in a glass plate.

    27. 27 Objective In this exercise, we will experiment with the relationships between the size, shape, and composition (material) of an object and its mass.

    28. 28 Directions Use the balance and standard weights in the cat family box to measure the masses of various objects. You can also use the ring, and square weights in these determinations. The mass of each standard metal weight is inscribed on its top where 1 = 1 gm, 20 = 20 gms and so on. In Exercise 1 we determined the weight of yellow square to equal 1 gram, orange square to equal 5 grams, purple square to equal 10 grams.

    29. 29 TO BEGIN . . . You will need Balance Box with cat family sticker Box with tiger sticker box with male lion sticker Box with a spider sticker that contains 3 hickory nuts, 5 pieces of string, 1 acorn, 1 stone, 1 cotton ball, 1 feather, 5 paper clips, 2 noodles, 1 plastic cap,1 prickly seed ball Box with a zebra sticker

    30. 30 Find the box with the spider sticker on it that contains a number of objects that differ in size, shape and density of material. As a class explore the relationships among the above characteristics of objects and mass. To help you get started in this exploration, complete experiments that will answer the questions that follow.

    31. 31 What is the approximate mass of three hickory nuts? Do different hickory nuts weigh the same? If not, why might they differ in mass? Do acorns differ in mass? What does an acorn cap weigh relative to the nut itself? Does a hickory nut weigh more than an acorn? Approximately how much do two spiral noodles weigh? If you know how much two noodles weigh, can you estimate the mass of one noodle without weighing it? Discussion Questions

    32. 32 Why might two noodles be more equal in mass than two nuts? Which has a smaller mass: two pieces of woven string or two paperclips? Which weighs more: a feather, a ball of cotton, or a polystyrene peanut (zebra box)? Does the stone have the same mass as three hickory nuts weighed together? Is there an item in the spider box that weighs approximately five grams? If so what is it? What is the mass of the mystery hexagonal metal column? How does the mystery hexagonal metal column compare in size to the corresponding standard weight from the cat family box?

    33. 33 Super-Solver Problem Rank the following objects according to apparent size (length,width & height): (1 = the largest, 10 the smallest) acorn, cotton ball, feather, felt disk, hickory nut, metal washer plastic cap, polystyrene peanut spiny seed ball, stone. Fill in column 1 of the table. Now weigh each item & rank them according to mass. Fill in column 2 of the table. What contributes most to mass (shape, size or type of material)?

    34. 34 Exercise 3: How is Volume Related to Shape? Measuring an objects volume answers the question of "How much space does it take up? How much room an object or group of objects occupies describes its VOLUME. A simple way to think of volume is to picture how much of something can fit inside something else. For example, a swimming pool can hold a certain volume of water.

    35. 35 Objective Students will explore volume and its relationship to shape.

    36. 36 TO BEGIN . . . You will need Box with the giraffe sticker on its lid. Plastic bucket with the monkey sticker. This bucket should be filled with rice. Beaker and graduated cylinder.

    37. 37 Directions Line the six containers in the volumetric set up on a table at the front of the room. Poll the students as to what order the containers should be placed in from largest volume (will hold highest quantity of rice) to lowest volume (holds least amount of rice). Adjust the position of the containers accordingly. Lets find out if the majority has guessed correctly. Select two volunteers to fill the containers with rice in each of the following experiments, initiated by particular questions.

    38. 38 Question 1. Just by looking, hypothesize as to what other container might hold the same volume of rice as the sphere, given the information that only one holds the same amount of rice as the sphere. Test of question 1. Have 2 volunteers fill the sphere with rice while it sits in the container it was housed in with the hole at the top. One student should hold the funnel and watch the sphere fill. The other can pour the rice. Note: You may have to shake the funnel a bit as the rice may stick in the neck of the funnel.

    39. 39 Pour the rice from the sphere into the container the class has chosen as being similar in volume. If you have rice left in the sphere, then the container you have chosen is too small. If the new container is not filled to the top with the rice from the sphere, then this container has a larger volume than the sphere. Keep filling containers until you have found the correct one.

    40. 40 Question 1. What container holds the same volume of rice as the sphere? STOP!!! Answer is next!

    41. 41 Leave the rectangular box filled with rice following completion of test 1 as it will be used in answering question 2. Question 2. Which container holds TWICE the amount of rice as the rectangular box? Which container can you eliminate without testing? Hint, See answer to Question 1.

    42. 42 Pour the rice from the rectangular box into the container the class decides is two times larger. Fill the rectangular box again, using rice from the monkey bucket and pour this into the same container you have poured the first batch of rice into. If you guessed the correct container, two rectangular boxes full of rice should approximately fill the container you chose. If this is not the case, choose another container and try again. Note: Remember to select different students to fill the containers in each test.

    43. 43 Question 2. Which container holds TWICE the amount of rice as the rectangular box? STOP!!! Answer is next!

    44. 44 Find the cylinder. Question 3. Do the cube and cylinder have the same volume?

    45. 45 Slowly pour the rice from the cube into the cylinder Question 3. Do the cube and cylinder have the same volume? STOP!!! Answer is next!

    46. 46 Turn the empty cube upside down so that the open side is facing down. Set the cylinder on top of the cube.. Question 4: Can you tell by looking down at the containers why one has a higher volume? HINT: It has to do with shape! STOP!!! Answer is next!

    47. 47 There are two containers left in the giraffe box that we have yet to examine. One is a cone (think ice cream!) and the other a pyramid. Observe the size and shape of these containers. Are the containers the same height? Yes, the cone and pyramid are equally tall.

    48. 48 Question 5. Are the volumes of a cone and pyramid that are equally tall equal? Think carefully! If you are having trouble, look at the bases of the containers and remember the cube vs. cylinder comparison. One has a square base, and the other a circular base.

    49. 49 Slide the cone into the pyramid. Now you should be able to see which one has the greater volume. Question 5. Are the volumes of a cone and pyramid that are equally tall equal? STOP!!! Answer is next!

    50. 50 Finally, let's see if we can determine the volume of each shape available to us. Materials Beaker (provided) Graduated cylinder

    51. 51 Begin by choosing one of the shapes. Then, fill it to the top with rice. With the aid of the funnel, carefully pour the rice that filled the container into the beaker and try to read the measurement in milliliters on the side of the beaker. Can you make an accurate (precise) measurement of the volume of rice using the beaker? Lets see if we can get a more accurate measurement of the shape you have chosen. Again with the aid of the funnel, pour the rice you had in the beaker into the graduated cylinder. Read the measurement on the side of the graduated cylinder.

    52. 52 Repeat this process for the rest of the shapes and compare them. Question 6. Which shape has the biggest volume? Which has the smallest volume? For answer, consult your table! Note: Please place the empty clear containers back into the giraffe box. Now return the giraffe box back into the wooden trunk.

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