In first grade math, students learn about capacity, which refers to the amount of liquid a container can hold. Students learn to compare and measure the capacity of different containers using non-standard units such as cups, pints, quarts, and gallons.
Key Concepts
Students are introduced to the following key concepts related to capacity:
Comparing Capacity: Students learn to compare the capacity of different containers, understanding that some containers can hold more liquid than others.
Measuring Capacity: Students practice measuring the capacity of containers using non-standard units, such as filling one container with water and pouring it into another to see how many times it needs to be filled.
Understanding Units: Students become familiar with non-standard units of capacity, such as cups, pints, quarts, and gallons, and learn to recognize and name these units.
Activities
To help students understand capacity, teachers may use various hands-on activities, including:
Comparing Containers: Students compare the capacity of different containers by pouring water from one to another and observing which container can hold more or less.
Measuring with Cups: Students practice measuring and pouring water using cups of different sizes, learning about the concept of full, half full, and empty.
Estimating Capacity: Students make estimations about how many cups of water it will take to fill a larger container, and then test their estimations by actually measuring.
Assessment
Teachers may assess students' understanding of capacity through various methods, including:
Observation: Teachers observe students as they engage in hands-on activities involving capacity, noting their ability to compare, measure, and understand units of capacity.
Verbal Responses: Teachers ask students questions about the capacity of different containers, prompting them to use appropriate vocabulary and explain their reasoning.
Written Work: Students may complete worksheets or activities that involve comparing and measuring capacity, demonstrating their understanding through written responses.
By the end of first grade, students are expected to have a basic understanding of capacity, including the ability to compare, measure, and use non-standard units to describe the amount of liquid a container can hold.
Understand numbers, ways of representing numbers, relationships among numbers, and number systems.
Develop understanding of the relative position and magnitude of whole numbers and of ordinal and cardinal numbers and their connections.
Grade 1 Curriculum Focal Points (NCTM)
Number and Operations: Developing an understanding of whole number relationships, including grouping in tens and ones
Children compare and order whole numbers (at least to 100) to develop an understanding of and solve problems involving the relative sizes of these numbers. They think of whole numbers between 10 and 100 in terms of groups of tens and ones (especially recognizing the numbers 11 to 19 as 1 group of ten and particular numbers of ones). They understand the sequential order of the counting numbers and their relative magnitudes and represent numbers on a number line.