Get the Companion Worksheet Set:
1.
Teachers Pay Teachers - https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Store/Numberock-By-Mr-Hehn
2.
TES - https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/-volume-song-worksheets-quiz-and-music-video-11169634
Subscribe to Our
YouTube Channel!
http://goo.gl/3H3bJ6
Song available for streaming on all major streaming networks like
Google Play, Spotify,
Groove,
Beats, and
Apple Music
Buy this song for $0.89 on
Amazon.com: http://goo.gl/Tpiad5
________
LYRICS:
To find the volume of a cube,
Side times side times side will tell you:
The number of times a cubic unit
Will be able to fit inside it.
Imagine a cube with edges of three.
Multiply three by three by three to see
It can fit twenty-seven units
...gotta mention that they’re cubic!
When finding volume, don’t forget to mention:
The unit is a cube with three dimensions.
To get a rectangular prism’s volume right:
Length times width... times the height.
Cubic units label three dimensions
When we answer any volume questions.
With the dimensions two, three, and six,
first find the base: that’s length times width.
The base is six cubes; then multiply the height:
36 cubic units fill it up just right!
When finding volume, don’t forget to mention:
The unit is a cube with three dimensions.
A solid shape made of more than one prism
Has a volume you can find with this wisdom:
Think of each shape separately
And find the volume of each individually.
Then add the volumes nine and one:
We get ten cubic units and this problem’s done!
____
ABOUT:
http://www.NUMBEROCK.com is a provider of educational videos for kids which was founded by an innovative 5th
Grade teacher who envisioned a new kind of classroom where students got energized for math class.
Parents of his students even noticed their children singing mathematics songs around the dinner table well beyond school hours.
Seeing his students so enthusiastic when it was time for math was welcome, to say the least! But the epiphanous moment was when students were singing math songs all-day long like they were in the
American Top 40!
Each of these rhythmic music videos from NUMBEROCK can be enjoyed right here on our YouTube Channel. We, hereby, cordially invite you to browse through the full library and hope you'll find that the songs make the maths* remarkably more fun.
We dare to believe that these math songs + videos can actually identify with elementary school children's increasingly finicky perception of what is cool and trendy. While each song is diverse in composition, most fit directly into the modern musical genres that excite young kids: genres such as Rap,
R&B;,
Pop, Hip-Hop and even
Reggae!
We're curious to see how these musical math videos will be used now that we have shared them with a broader audience. But whether you use these songs as a rich teaching resource or just to brighten up the school-day a bit, we hope that as our project continues you will eventually find a relevant song for each lesson plan and concept in the math curriculum taught throughout the academic year.
We'll be releasing new songs and videos regularly until eventually addressing all the math skills and concepts that a
Common Core Curriculum demands from
3rd Grade to 4th Grade, and even 5th Grade to
6th Grade.
Our main goal is to make teaching and learning math more fun and more interactive.
SchoolHouse Rock! has done this in other subjects for us in the previous generations, and many of us still enjoy watching their YouTube Videos which teach us about
Government,
Science, and
English amongst other subjects.
If you dig us, please subscribe in order to enjoy our ever-evolving library of videos and make l̶e̶a̶r̶n̶i̶n̶g̶ rocking numbers more fun and successful! http://goo.gl/3H3bJ6
For those interested in accompanying worksheets, we will be providing them shortly through tes.com and teacherspayteachers.com. Teaching and
Learning Resources such as
Student Workbooks with
Answer Keys will be available on AMAZON by the end of the year which will include exercises for each of our videos.
*
Math and maths are both acceptable abbreviations of mathematics.
The difference is that math is preferred in the
U.S. and
Canada, and maths is preferred in the
England,
Ireland,
Australia, and most other
English-speaking areas around the world.
- published: 28 Jul 2015
- views: 7072