Mass & temperature
In this topic you will
- Measure mass using grams ($\text{g}$) and kilograms ($\text{kg}$).
- Read scales that show grams ($\text{g}$), kilograms ($\text{kg}$), and temperature.
- Estimate the mass of familiar objects.
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.

EXERCISES
$1$. 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.
👀 Show answer
$6$ 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.

👀 Show answer
Answers will vary depending on the objects you choose. Example entries:
- Pencil: estimate $10$ g, mass $8$ g, less than $100$ g.
- Rubber/eraser: estimate $25$ g, mass $22$ g, less than $100$ g.
- Small book: estimate $300$ g, mass $280$ g, more than $100$ g.
- Water bottle (empty): estimate $60$ g, mass $55$ g, less than $100$ g.
$3$. 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 ______ + ______ + ______ + ______
👀 Show answer
Answers depend on which weights you have. Example solutions (using common classroom weights):
- $1$ kilogram: $500$ g + $500$ g.
- $20$ grams using $3$ weights: $10$ g + $5$ g + $5$ g.
- $20$ grams using $4$ weights: $5$ g + $5$ g + $5$ g + $5$ g.
$4$. 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.
👀 Show answer
- What do you notice? The number of units changes depending on the unit you choose. Smaller units usually need more pieces; larger units need fewer pieces.
- Best non-standard unit: A unit that is the same size and weight each time (for example, identical cubes) because it gives a fair, consistent result and is easy to count.
- Not good to use: Units that are different sizes or are awkward to balance (for example, mixed blocks) because the result is less reliable and harder to compare.
Think like a Mathematician
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:
- Place the cards face down in a pile.
- Take a card. Place it on one of the spaces by your scales.
- Draw an arrow on the scales to match your card.
- Take a second card. Add this to the first card and draw an arrow showing the combined mass of both cards.
- You can pick up to $4$ cards, in turn.
- The player whose scales show a mass closest to $100$ grams is the winner.

Follow-up Questions:
Show Answers
- 1: No. The winner can change each time because the cards you pick are random, and different card combinations can get closer to $100$ grams.
- 2: Each round depends on chance (which cards are drawn) and choices (whether to stop or take another card up to $4$). A different set of cards or different decisions can make a different player closer to $100$ grams.
