Volume: Cylinders, Cones, and Spheres

Teacher Guide | Grade 8 Mathematics | FAST Success Kit
Florida B.E.S.T. Standards: MA.8.GR.1.4, MA.8.GR.1.5
Learning Objective 5-10 min lesson
Students will: Calculate the volume of cylinders, cones, and spheres using the appropriate formulas; understand the relationship between these formulas; and solve real-world problems involving volume.

Why this matters for FAST: Volume problems appear frequently on FAST. Students must know when to use each formula, correctly identify radius vs. diameter, and apply formulas to real-world contexts.

Materials Needed
Common Misconceptions to Address

Misconception #1: Using diameter instead of radius

Students use the given diameter directly in the formula instead of dividing by 2 to get the radius first.

How to Address:

"ALWAYS check: Is this the radius or diameter? Radius goes from center to edge. Diameter goes all the way across. If given diameter, DIVIDE BY 2 to get radius before using any formula!"

Misconception #2: Forgetting the fraction in cone and sphere formulas

Students use V = pi r squared h for cones (forgetting the 1/3) or V = pi r cubed for spheres (forgetting the 4/3).

How to Address:

"A cone is exactly 1/3 of a cylinder with the same base and height - that's why we multiply by 1/3. For a sphere, the 4/3 comes from calculus, but you can remember: sphere formula has 4/3 and r CUBED (three dimensions!)."

Misconception #3: Confusing r squared with r cubed

Students use r squared in the sphere formula or r cubed in cylinder/cone formulas.

How to Address:

"Cylinders and cones have a circular BASE (r squared) times HEIGHT (h). Spheres have NO height - they're the same in all directions, so we use r CUBED. Remember: Base times height = r squared h. All directions = r cubed."

Lesson Steps
1

Activate Prior Knowledge (1 min)

Review area of a circle: A = pi r squared. "This will be the BASE of our cylinders and cones!" Also review that volume is 3D - measured in cubic units.

2

Introduce Cylinder Volume (2 min)

SAY THIS:

"A cylinder is like stacking circles on top of each other. Volume = Base area times Height. Since the base is a circle, V = pi r squared h."

Cylinder: V = pi r squared h

r = radius of the circular base

h = height of the cylinder

Example: r = 3 cm, h = 10 cm

V = pi (3 squared)(10) = pi (9)(10) = 90 pi = 282.74 cubic cm

3

Introduce Cone Volume (2 min)

Cone: V = (1/3) pi r squared h

A cone is exactly 1/3 of a cylinder with the same base and height!

Example: r = 3 cm, h = 10 cm

V = (1/3) pi (3 squared)(10) = (1/3)(90 pi) = 30 pi = 94.25 cubic cm

4

Introduce Sphere Volume (2 min)

Sphere: V = (4/3) pi r cubed

No height needed - a sphere is the same in all directions

Example: r = 3 cm

V = (4/3) pi (3 cubed) = (4/3) pi (27) = 36 pi = 113.10 cubic cm

5

Guided Practice (2-3 min)

Work through examples together:

  • A water tank cylinder: diameter = 8 ft, height = 12 ft. Find volume. (r = 4, V = pi (16)(12) = 192 pi = 603.19 cubic ft)
  • An ice cream cone: diameter = 4 cm, height = 10 cm. Find volume. (r = 2, V = (1/3) pi (4)(10) = 40/3 pi = 41.89 cubic cm)
  • A basketball: diameter = 9.4 in. Find volume. (r = 4.7, V = (4/3) pi (103.823) = 434.89 cubic in)
Check for Understanding

Quick Exit Ticket:

"A cone and cylinder have the same radius (5 cm) and height (12 cm). How do their volumes compare?"

Correct answer: The cone's volume is 1/3 of the cylinder's volume. Cylinder V = pi (25)(12) = 300 pi. Cone V = 100 pi. You can fill the cone 3 times to equal the cylinder!

IXL Skills to Assign

Recommended IXL Practice:

Volume of cylinders Volume of cones Volume of spheres Volume word problems Relate volume of cylinders and cones
Differentiation & Extension

For struggling students: Focus on one shape at a time. Provide formula cards. Emphasize checking radius vs diameter. Use round numbers first.

For advanced students: Challenge with composite figures (hemisphere on cylinder, cone on cylinder). Have them derive why cone is 1/3 of cylinder experimentally.

For home: Send Parent Activity sheet. Families can measure cylindrical containers and calculate volume.