This math topic focuses on estimating reasonable metric volumes for various objects or quantities. It includes determining suitable volumes using metric units such as liters (l), milliliters (ml), and microliters (µl). The problems involve common items like dessert spoons, kitchen sinks, bathtubs, snowflakes, cups of coffee, and spoonfuls of water. Students are asked to select the most reasonable metric volume for each scenario provided. Each question offers two potential answers, requiring students to decide which one seems more plausible based on context and everyday items.
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What is the most reasonable value for the given measurement?
The volume of one snowflake
Math worksheet on 'Measurement Reasonable Value - Volume (metric) (Level 1)'. Part of a broader unit on 'Measurement - Units Intro - Metric' Learn online: app.mobius.academy/math/units/measurement_unit_intro_metric/ |
What is the most reasonable value for the given measurement? |
The volume of a tea kettle |
2 l |
2 ml |
What is the most reasonable value for the given measurement? |
The volume of a large spoon of water |
25 l |
25 ml |
What is the most reasonable value for the given measurement? |
The volume of a large takeout cup of coffee |
340 ml |
340 l |
What is the most reasonable value for the given measurement? |
The volume of a small spoon of water |
15 µl |
15 ml |
What is the most reasonable value for the given measurement? |
The volume of an oil barrel |
159 ml |
159 l |
What is the most reasonable value for the given measurement? |
The volume of a dessert spoon |
1 cl |
1 l |
What is the most reasonable value for the given measurement? |
The volume of one snowflake |
1 l |
1 ml |