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Learn how units of length, weight, volume, and time relate to each other so you can measure anything in the world around you!
Have you ever wondered why we use rulers and scales? A long, long time ago, people needed to measure things — like how far apart two towns were, or how heavy a bag of grain was. But there were no rulers! People used their own bodies to measure, like the length of a foot or the width of a hand. The problem was that everyone's feet and hands are different sizes. That meant measurements were messy and confusing.
Over hundreds of years, people worked together to create standard units — units that mean the same thing for everyone. Let's look at how this happened!
The big question we are going to answer in this lesson is: How do the different units within each system relate to each other? For example, how many centimeters make a meter? How many ounces make a pound? Once you know these relationships, you can switch between units whenever you need to!
Before we jump into the numbers, let's talk about the important ideas that make measurement work. There are four main types of measurement we'll study, and two big systems that use different units.
A system of units is a family of measurement units that work together. Within a system, there is always a simple number that connects a smaller unit to a bigger unit. For example, there are exactly 100 centimeters in 1 meter. That number — 100 — is the conversion factor. It tells you how to switch between the two units.
The key rule is: when you go from a bigger unit to a smaller unit, you multiply. When you go from a smaller unit to a bigger unit, you divide. That's because it takes many small units to equal one big unit.
The diagram below shows the four types of measurement we're learning about. For each type, you can see how the bigger unit breaks down into smaller units. Look at the arrows — they show what number you multiply by to go from the bigger unit to the smaller one.
Look at the arrows. Every arrow says "× some number." That number tells you how many of the smaller unit fit inside one of the bigger unit. For instance, the arrow from hr to min says × 60. That means there are 60 minutes in 1 hour. If you want to go the other way — from minutes back to hours — you divide by 60 instead.
Here are the exact conversion numbers you need to know. We'll organize them by type. Remember, these numbers tell you how many of the smaller unit make one of the bigger unit.
Notice a pattern? In the metric system, most conversions use 1,000 or 100. These are powers of 10, which makes metric math easier. The U.S. customary system uses trickier numbers like 16. Time is its own thing — it uses 60.
Two simple rules to remember:
🔹 Big unit → small unit? Multiply. (You need more of the small unit.)
🔹 Small unit → big unit? Divide. (You need fewer of the big unit.)
Let's put every conversion in one big table so you can see them all together. We'll also show a real-life example for each one so you can picture the size.
| Type | Conversion | Real-Life Example |
|---|---|---|
| Length | 1 km = 1,000 m | Walking about 12 minutes along a road is about 1 km. |
| Length | 1 m = 100 cm | A baseball bat is about 1 m long. |
| Weight | 1 kg = 1,000 g | A pineapple weighs about 1 kg. |
| Weight | 1 lb = 16 oz | A loaf of bread weighs about 1 lb (16 oz). |
| Volume | 1 L = 1,000 mL | A large water bottle holds about 1 L. |
| Time | 1 hr = 60 min | A school class is usually about 1 hour. |
| Time | 1 min = 60 sec | Singing "Happy Birthday" takes about 15 seconds. |
You can see that 1,000 shows up three times — for km→m, kg→g, and L→mL. The metric system loves the number 1,000! The bar for lb→oz is the shortest because only 16 ounces fit in a pound.
Let's solve a problem together so you can see how converting units works from start to finish.
3 × 1,000 = 3,000You might wonder why we have two different systems. Let's compare them!
| Feature | Metric System | U.S. Customary System |
|---|---|---|
| Used Where? | Most countries in the world | Mainly the United States |
| Conversion Numbers | Usually 10, 100, or 1,000 | Different for every unit (16, 12, 8, 4…) |
| Easy to Calculate? | Yes! Just move the decimal point. | Harder — you have to remember many different numbers. |
| Weight Units Here | kg, g | lb, oz |
| Used in Science? | Always | Rarely |
Both systems work just fine for measuring things. The metric system is great because the math is simpler (you multiply or divide by 10, 100, or 1,000). The customary system is what many Americans use in everyday life when they say something weighs "5 pounds" or a recipe calls for "8 ounces."
One thing both systems share: time! Everyone in the world uses hours, minutes, and seconds. There's no metric version of time — it's the same everywhere.
Now that you understand how units relate to each other, you're building a super important skill. In 5th grade, you'll learn to convert between even more units and work with decimals when converting. For example, you'll learn that 2.5 km = 2,500 m.
| What You Learn Now (4th Grade) | What's Coming Next (5th Grade & Beyond) |
|---|---|
| 1 km = 1,000 m | Converting with decimals: 0.5 km = 500 m |
| 1 m = 100 cm | Adding millimeters (mm): 1 m = 1,000 mm |
| 1 lb = 16 oz | Tons: 1 ton = 2,000 lb |
| 1 L = 1,000 mL | Cups, pints, quarts, gallons (U.S. volume) |
| 1 hr = 60 min | Solving word problems with mixed time units |
Everything you learn today is the foundation for all of that. If you know that 1 km = 1,000 m, then figuring out 2.5 km later will be a breeze: just 2.5 × 1,000 = 2,500 m. You're setting yourself up for success!
Try these on your own! Click "Show Answer" when you're ready to check your work.
In this lesson, you learned how to compare and convert measurement units within the same system. For length, 1 kilometer equals 1,000 meters, and 1 meter equals 100 centimeters. For weight in the metric system, 1 kilogram equals 1,000 grams. In the U.S. customary system, 1 pound equals 16 ounces. For liquid volume, 1 liter equals 1,000 milliliters. And for time, 1 hour equals 60 minutes, and 1 minute equals 60 seconds.
The two big rules are simple: multiply when going from a bigger unit to a smaller unit, and divide when going from a smaller unit to a bigger unit. The metric system uses nice round numbers like 100 and 1,000, while the customary system uses numbers like 16. Time uses 60 for both hours-to-minutes and minutes-to-seconds. Now you have all the tools you need to measure and convert like a pro!