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The purpose of this Warm-up is to elicit observations and questions about pounds and ounces in a familiar context, which will be useful when students reason about the relationship between the two units later in the lesson.
What do you notice? What do you wonder?
Pounds and Ounces Image Cards
The goal of this activity is to build students’ intuition for 1 pound, 1 ounce, and the relationship between the two units. Students use labels on food packaging to reason about how pounds and ounces are related, and then use what they learn to convert pounds to ounces. Students reason abstractly and quantitatively when they determine the relationship between pounds and ounces from food labels (MP2).
Note that the quantities shown on food packaging or nutritional labels are often rounded rather than exact. For instance, a package labeled “32 ounces (2 pounds)” may contain 31.8 ounces but be labeled as 32 ounces or 2 pounds. In this activity, for the purposes of learning that one unit is 16 times the other, students will take the labels at face value. Consider explaining (during the Activity Synthesis) that, in reality, the label may not match the content exactly.
The blackline master includes images that can be used for the activity. If desired and if practical, actual packaged food could be used instead. In that case, be sure to choose items with whole numbers of pounds and ounces, and to exclude items that show that 1 pound is equivalent to 16 ounces, as students reasoning about the equivalence is the point of the activity.
Your teacher will show images of some packaged food items.
Use the information on the images to find out how pounds (lb) and ounces (oz) are related.
| pounds (lb) | ounces (oz) |
|---|---|
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 8 | |
| 10 |
In the first activity, students learned that one pound is 16 times as heavy as 1 ounce. Here they apply this knowledge to convert quantities into ounces and to solve multi-step problems. The quantities include a fractional number of pounds and one quantity expressed in a combination of pounds and ounces.
As in earlier lessons in which they encountered a fractional amount of a unit of measurement, students are not expected to find the number of ounces in pound by writing . Instead, they can reason about half of a quantity, using their understanding of fractions and by dividing an amount by 2. Those who do write represent the situation correctly, but this reasoning and the related operation will be developed in grade 5.
A family is cooking for a party and needs to buy some ingredients for a main dish:
How many ounces of each ingredient does the family need to buy? Show your reasoning.
“Today we learned about the relationship between pounds and ounces and solved some problems that involve those measurements.”
“When you weigh yourself, the scale likely gives your weight in pounds. If the scale is set to measure in ounces, will the number be greater or less? How much greater or less? Why is that?” (Greater, 16 times greater because there are 16 ounces in 1 pound, so the amount in pounds needs to be multiplied by 16 to get the equivalent in ounces.)
“How is the relationship between pounds and ounces like that between kilograms and grams?” (One unit is larger than the other.)
“How is it different from the relationship between kilograms and grams?” (In pounds and ounces, the larger unit is 16 times the smaller unit. In kilograms and grams, the larger unit is 1,000 times the smaller unit.)