The mass of a light object such as a pencil is measured in grams. A heavier object such as a bag of flour is measured in kilograms. Light things are not always small. Big things are not always heavy.
This balloon is big and light.

We can measure temperature using a thermometer. The hotter something is, the higher up the scale the colour inside it goes.

$1$. The recipe for $12$ chocolate chip cookies is
How much of each would you need if you wanted to make $6$ biscuits?
__________ flour __________ butter __________ sugar
__________ chocolate chips
Tell your partner how you worked out your answers.
$6$ is half of $12$, so halve each amount: flour $50$ grams, butter $20$ grams, sugar $15$ grams, chocolate chips $10$ grams.
$2$. Estimate and record the mass of four objects in your classroom.
Use weighing scales and record in the table below.

Answers will vary depending on the objects you choose. Example entries:
$3$. Work with a partner.
You will need balance scales.
Use the weights on your table.
Estimate and then find $2$ weights that equal $1$ kilogram ______ + ______
Find $3$ weights that equal $20$ grams ______ + ______ + ______
Find $4$ weights that equal $20$ grams ______ + ______ + ______ + ______
Answers depend on which weights you have. Example solutions (using common classroom weights):
$4$. Find the mass of an object using different non-standard units.
Keep the object you are weighing the same but change the non-standard unit each time. A non-standard unit could be counters, cubes, wooden blocks or something else.
Record your findings.
What do you notice?
Which non-standard unit was the best to use? Explain why.
Which non-standard unit was not good to use? Explain why.
Play this game on your own. You will need some mass cards. The aim of the game is to get as close to $100$ grams as you can.
Method:

Follow-up Questions: