Learning intention
Students will learn how to:
begin to use the language of volume and capacity.
Success criteria
I will know I have been successful if I can:
- say whether something is full, empty, half full, nearly empty or nearly full
- fill a cup to full, half full, nearly full and nearly empty.
Prerequisites
Basic concept of ‘half’
Language
Reinforce the use of the language of volume and capacity: full, empty, half-full, nearly empty, overflowing, liquid, more, less
Before the video
- Ask the students if they have felt ‘full’ after eating. Ask them what that means to them and how it feels.
- Ask the students if there are other times they use the word ‘full’. What about ‘empty’?
During the video
First viewing:
Watch the video without stopping or pausing. Then, ask the children to explain what happened in the video. Begin to draw out key vocabulary or possible misconceptions.
Second viewing:
Pause point |
Key learning |
Action/discussion |
1:00 |
Full |
What tells Ed that his cup is full? |
1:24 |
Overflowing |
Why does the liquid pour out? What would happen if Sarah had a larger cup? |
2:22 |
Half-full |
What tells Ed that it is half full? Students should demonstrate where they think the half-way mark is on their own bodies. |
4:32 |
Nearly empty |
Ed says it is nearly empty. Does that mean it is more or less than half full? |
5:48 |
Less liquid |
How does Ed know that Sarah has less liquid than he does? |
After the video
Waterplay:
- ‘Can you make a full cup/ empty cup/ nearly empty cup/ half-full cup/ overflowing cup?’
Mathletics worksheet:
Download worksheet
Download other worksheets
Capacity café:
- Use the Mathletics capacity café cards to explore the language of volume and capacity. Have students take turns giving orders at the café, eg 1 half-full cup, 3 full cups. Use 5 containers and suitable objects, eg sand, water, cotton wool balls, beads.
Download resource