This year I am tutoring kids to pass our state math and biology tests. Here in Massachusetts, the MCAS has been in place since 1993 and a graduation requirement for around 20 years.
In November 2024, the graduation requirement was repealed, and districts are currently putting new competency standards in place. Most of my students are still coming to tutoring, and now we're allowed to have a bit more fun than just practicing on old MCAS exams. Students will still take the MCAS, it just won't prevent them from getting a diploma anymore.
The MCAS allows students a reference sheet of formulas. As is often the case, the fractions in the volume formulas can be confusing, so we did a discovery lesson. I've seen volume discovery lessons, so what we did was nothing new, but it worked so well that I wanted to share with you in case your students also struggle with the 1/3 in the pyramid and cone formulas.
Needed for this lesson: a bag of kinetic sand and a box of fillable plastic 3D shapes. I got both on Amazon. The lesson plan with worksheets for follow up is a free download here.
I wrote the volume formulas for cylinder, cone, prism and pyramid on the board, along a couple questions:
- How many cones fit into a cylinder?
- How many pyramids fit into a prism?
We used the cube as a prism because it has the same base and height as the pyramid. The cone and cylinder have the same dimensions.
Next comes the fun part. Students fill the cone with sand and transfer the sand to the cylinder to find that 3 cones fill up a cylinder. They did the same for pyramid and prism (cube).
follow up worksheets |
We go back to the questions written on the board and students can easily answer them. We then discuss how we can go from the prism/cylinder formulas to the pyramid/cone formulas with division, and that dividing by 3 is the same as multiplying by 1/3. Then students complete a couple follow up worksheets. Wouldn't it be great if the formulas used division instead fractions?
Free volume discovery lesson plan and worksheets |
You can get the free, editable lesson plan and worksheets here.
More posts:
Teaching Volume and Surface Area with Interactive Materials
Free math resource library |