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The purpose of this Warm-up is for students to consider some common errors that happen when calculating the volume of a sphere. This work will help prepare students for the Information Gap in this lesson.
Monitor for students who use the formula for a cylinder or cone, who use instead of , or who forget to include as a factor in the computation.
Arrange students in groups of 2. Give students 1–2 minutes of quiet work time followed by time to discuss their responses with their partner.
Four students each calculated the volume of a sphere with a radius of 9 centimeters, and they got four different answers.
Do you agree with any of them? Explain your reasoning.
For each answer, ask students to indicate whether or not they agree. Display the number of students who agree with each answer all to see. Invite someone who agreed with to explain their reasoning. Ask students if they think they know what the other students did incorrectly to get their answers. (To get 108, Han and Jada likely used instead of , and Tyler may have forgotten to write as part of his answer.)
Optional
The purpose of this activity is for students to think about how to find the radius of a sphere when its volume is known. Students can examine the structure of the equation for volume and reason about a number that makes the equation true. They can also notice that is a factor on each side of the equation, so the equation is still true if rewritten without on each side. Both strategies simplify the solution process and minimize the need for rounding. Watch for students who substitute a value for to each side of the equation, who use the structure of the equation to reason about the solution, or who solve another way so that these strategies can be shared and compared in the whole-class discussion.
Allow students 3–4 minutes work time, and follow with a whole-class discussion.
The volume of this sphere with radius is .
This statement is true:
What is the value of for this sphere? Explain how you know.
The purpose of the discussion is to examine how students reasoned through each step in solving for the unknown radius. Ask previously identified students to share their responses.
Consider asking students the following questions to help clarify the different approaches students took:
In this activity, students calculate the volumes of spheres but do not initially have enough information to do so. To bridge the gap, they need to exchange questions and ideas.
The Information Gap structure requires students to make sense of problems by determining what information is necessary and then to ask for information they need to solve it. This may take several rounds of discussion if their first requests do not yield the information they need (MP1). It also allows them to refine the language they use and ask increasingly more precise questions until they get the information they need (MP6).
If any partners finish quickly, perhaps because they recall that the volume of a cone is half the volume of a sphere with matching dimensions, encourage them to collaborate to find a different way to solve the problem.
Math Community
Display the Math Community Chart for all to see. Give students a brief quiet think time to read the norms, or invite a student to read them out loud. Tell students that during this activity they are going to practice looking for their classmates putting the norms into action. At the end of the activity, students can share what norms they saw and how the norm supported the mathematical community during the activity.
Tell students they will practice calculating the volume of spheres. Display the Information Gap graphic that illustrates a framework for the routine for all to see.
Remind students of the structure of the Information Gap routine, and consider demonstrating the protocol if students are unfamiliar with it.
Arrange students in groups of 2. In each group, give a problem card to one student and a data card to the other student. After reviewing their work on the first problem, give students the cards for a second problem and instruct them to switch roles.
Your teacher will give you either a problem card or a data card. Do not show or read your card to your partner.
If your teacher gives you the problem card:
Silently read your card, and think about what information you need to answer the question.
Ask your partner for the specific information that you need. “Can you tell me ?”
Explain to your partner how you are using the information to solve the problem. “I need to know because . . . .”
Continue to ask questions until you have enough information to solve the problem.
Once you have enough information, share the problem card with your partner, and solve the problem independently.
Read the data card, and discuss your reasoning.
If your teacher gives you the data card:
Silently read your card. Wait for your partner to ask for information.
Before telling your partner any information, ask, “Why do you need to know ?”
Listen to your partner’s reasoning and ask clarifying questions. Only give information that is on your card. Do not figure out anything for your partner!
These steps may be repeated.
Once your partner says they have enough information to solve the problem, read the problem card, and solve the problem independently.
Share the data card, and discuss your reasoning.
After students have completed their work, share the correct answers, and ask students to discuss the process of solving the problems. Here are some questions for discussion:
As students respond, highlight any student sketches that include labeled dimensions, and display these for all to see. In particular, contrast students who used volume formulas to determine the value of the radius with those who remembered that the volume of a cone is half the volume of a sphere with the same dimensions (radius and height).
Math Community
Conclude the discussion by inviting 2–3 students to share a norm they identified in action. Provide this sentence frame to help students organize their thoughts in a clear, precise way:
Optional
In this activity, students once again consider different figures with given dimensions, this time comparing their capacity to contain a certain amount of water. The goal is for students to not only apply the correct volume formulas, but to slow down and think about how the dimensions of the figures compare and how those measurements affect the volume of the figures.
Arrange students in groups of 2. Give students 5 minutes of quiet work time, then time for a partner discussion. Follow with a whole-class discussion.
A cylinder with diameter 3 centimeters and height 8 centimeters is filled with water.
Decide which figures described here, if any, could hold all of the water from the cylinder. Explain your reasoning.
The purpose of this discussion is to compare volumes of different figures by computation and also by considering the effect that different dimensions have on volume.
Ask students if they made any predictions about the volumes before directly computing them and, if yes, how they were able to predict. Students might have reasoned, for example, that the second cylinder had double the radius of the first, which would make the volume 4 times as great, but the height was only as great, so the volume would be the same. Or they might have seen that the cone would have a greater volume since the radius was double and the height was the same, making the volume (if it were another cylinder) 4 times as great, so the factor of for the cone didn’t bring the volume down below the volume of the cylinder.
In this unit, students have learned how to find the volume of cylinders, cones, and spheres, how to find an unknown dimension when the volume and another dimension are known, and how to reason about the effects of different dimensions of volume. Assign groups of 2–3 students one of the questions shown here, and provide them with the tools to make a visual display explaining their response. Encourage students to make their displays as if they were explaining the answer to the question to someone who is not in the class, and encourage them to make up values for dimensions to illustrate their ideas. Suggest sketches of figures where appropriate.
The formula gives the volume of a sphere with radius .
We can use the formula to find the volume of a sphere with a known radius. For example, if the radius of a sphere is 6 units, then the volume would be , or approximately 905 cubic units.
We can also use the formula to find the radius of a sphere if we only know its volume. For example, if we know that the volume of a sphere is cubic units but we don't know the radius, then this equation is true:
That means that , so the radius has to be 3 units in order for both sides of the equation to have the same value.
Many common objects, from water bottles to buildings to balloons, are similar in shape to rectangular prisms, cylinders, cones, or spheres—or even combinations of these shapes! Using the volume formulas for these shapes allows us to compare the volume of different types of objects, sometimes with surprising results.
For example, a cube-shaped box with side length 3 centimeters holds less than a sphere with radius 2 centimeters because the volume of the cube is 27 cubic centimeters () and the volume of the sphere is around 33.51 cubic centimeters ().
Students who substituted a value for and solved the resulting equation may have rounded along the way, making the value for the radius slightly less than 6, while the actual value is exactly 6. This is a good opportunity to talk about the effects of rounding and how to minimize the error that rounding introduces.