ABOUT VOLUME MUSIC VIDEO ANIMATION
See a rectangular prism deconstructed so that your students can look at what's happening inside of 3d shapes. Let the song take your students on a tour, exploring the concept of cubic units how we arrive at finding the volume of prisms and cubes.
With it's catchy melody and informative graphics and lyrics, this song will teach or reinforce the concept of volume, cubic units, and even shed light on finding the volume of multi-prism shapes, or additive volume.
LYRICS
To find the volume of a cube,
Side times side times side will tell you:
The number of times a cubic unit
Will be able to fit inside it.
Imagine a cube with edges of three.
Multiply three by three by three to see
It can fit twenty-seven units
...gotta mention that they’re cubic!
When finding volume, don’t forget to mention:
The unit is a cube with three dimensions.
To get a rectangular prism’s volume right:
Length times width... times the height.
Cubic units label three dimensions
When we answer any volume questions.
With the dimensions two, three, and six,
first find the base: that’s length times width.
The base is six cubes; then multiply the height:
36 cubic units fill it up just right!
When finding volume, don’t forget to mention:
The unit is a cube with three dimensions.
A solid shape made of more than one prism
Has a volume you can find with this wisdom:
Think of each shape separately
And find the volume of each individually.
Then add the volumes nine and one:
We get ten cubic units and this problem’s done!
Year 4, Year 5
See a rectangular prism deconstructed so that your students can look at what's happening inside of 3d shapes. Let the song take your students on a tour, exploring the concept of cubic units how we arrive at finding the volume of prisms and cubes.
With it's catchy melody and informative graphics and lyrics, this song will teach or reinforce the concept of volume, cubic units, and even shed light on finding the volume of multi-prism shapes, or additive volume.
LYRICS
To find the volume of a cube,
Side times side times side will tell you:
The number of times a cubic unit
Will be able to fit inside it.
Imagine a cube with edges of three.
Multiply three by three by three to see
It can fit twenty-seven units
...gotta mention that they’re cubic!
When finding volume, don’t forget to mention:
The unit is a cube with three dimensions.
To get a rectangular prism’s volume right:
Length times width... times the height.
Cubic units label three dimensions
When we answer any volume questions.
With the dimensions two, three, and six,
first find the base: that’s length times width.
The base is six cubes; then multiply the height:
36 cubic units fill it up just right!
When finding volume, don’t forget to mention:
The unit is a cube with three dimensions.
A solid shape made of more than one prism
Has a volume you can find with this wisdom:
Think of each shape separately
And find the volume of each individually.
Then add the volumes nine and one:
We get ten cubic units and this problem’s done!
Year 4, Year 5
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