The purpose of this activity is for students to estimate how much water falls on the roof of a house, given a particular amount of rainfall. For this calculation, standard units work well as the area of the roof could be given in square feet, for example, and the rain in inches. A conversion would readily give the volume in cubic feet or inches. But, the standard units used to measure volume are cups, pints, quarts, and gallons so more work would need to be done in order to figure out how many gallons, for example, there are in a cubic foot. With the metric system, liquid volume units (liters) and regular volume units (cubic centimeters) are naturally connected.
MLR5 Co-Craft Questions. Keep books or devices closed. Display only the image, without revealing the questions, and ask students to record possible mathematical questions that could be asked about the situation. Invite students to compare their questions before revealing the task. Ask, “¿Qué tienen en común estas preguntas? ¿En qué son diferentes?” // “What do these questions have in common? How are they different?” Reveal the intended questions for this task and invite additional connections.
Advances: Reading, Writing
Representation: Access for Perception. Read statements aloud. Students who both listen to and read the information will benefit from extra processing time.
Supports accessibility for: Conceptual Processing, Attention