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Course: Grade 4 math (FL B.E.S.T.) > Unit 14
Lesson 3: Converting units of length- Converting metric units of length
- Convert to smaller units (mm, cm, m, & km)
- Converting feet to inches
- Converting yards into inches
- Convert to smaller units (in, ft, yd, & mi)
- Metric units of length review (mm, cm, m, & km)
- US Customary units of length review (in, ft, yd, & mi)
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Converting yards into inches
Learn to convert between yards, feet, and inches. Created by Sal Khan and Monterey Institute for Technology and Education.
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- How many yards are in a mile, this video is listed as the help for miles to yards question?(20 votes)
- 1,760 miles Jesse(0 votes)
- I appreciate what he is doing and taking time out of his life to do this but he makes it more complicated than it has to be it could have just been.
36 inches in 1 yard = 36+36+36+36+18=162 <------theres your answer.
Why does he do it the long way??(16 votes)- He wants to give people who are having trouble understanding what he is doing an explanation, so they can understand the concept better.(13 votes)
- how many yards is in a mile(9 votes)
- A mile is 5,280 feet, and a yard is 3 feet.
So the number of yards in a mile is 5,280/3 = 1,760.(8 votes)
- how many miligrams are there in 5.6 kilograms(6 votes)
- You multiply 5.6 * 1000 to convert it to grams, and then multiply that answer by another 1000 to convert it to milligrams.(13 votes)
- At3:33did he mean 12 inches per foot
reply please(7 votes)- Sal said "12 inches per yard" but meant "12 inches per foot."(9 votes)
- I don't get this because when Sal is doing like feet or maybe yards n inches, how is he getting is answer by multiplying those words (yards, feet, inches). This is pretty a little confusing.(10 votes)
- at3:39Sal said there are 12 inches per yard. Aren't there 36?(6 votes)
- I think he meant 12 inches per foot and just got the terms "yards" and "feet" switched up.(8 votes)
- hello math people or whatever yall call your selves these days sorry to bother u but I don't really get this video like the function of it I don't get what it is telling or saying I dont understand it can somebody help me understand this thank I want to learn this and do good on y exercise(5 votes)
- Your question brings up a good point.
I've completed Kindergarten to mid-Grade 4 right up to this video and I don't recall Khan covering CANCELLING OF UNITS as he has done here. But I should tell you that if you can get the hang of this you will take it right the way through to physics and any other type of complex calculations you care to learn.
I suspect that if you can't understand these ideas then your confusions lay not in this video but further back in your basic understanding of fractions. I would go back as far as you need to and then work forward again to fully grasp the ideas in this video.(8 votes)
- I don't really understand why he's multiplying the measurements in fraction form?(7 votes)
- How many inches in one fourth yard(4 votes)
- Because there are 3 feet in a yard and 12 inches in a foot, there are 12*3=36 inches in a yard.
So one-fourth of a yard is 36/4=9 inches.
Have a blessed, wonderful day!(4 votes)
Video transcript
We're asked how many inches
are in 4 and 1/2 yards? Let me write that down. 4 and 1/2 yards. Now, whenever we're dealing with
fractions and we're going to multiply and divide by
fractions, it really complicates the issue to
have a mixed number. So right from the get go, I
want to turn this into an improper fraction. Let me do it over here
in the top right. 4 and 1/2 written
as an improper fraction is equal to what? We're still going to have
2 as a denominator. So 2 times 4 is 8. So 8/2 is the same thing 4. Let me rewrite this, just
as a bit of review. 4 is the same thing as 8/2. That's the same thing as 4. And then you have
that plus 1/2. That is going to give you 9/2. The quick way to do it: 2 times
4 is 8, 8 plus 1 is 9. So 4 and 1/2 is the
same thing as 9/2. So 4 and 1/2 yards is the same
thing as-- let me write it over here-- 9/2. yards. Now, we want to convert
this into inches. Just so we can take this in baby
steps, maybe we convert this into feet first, and then
once we have it in feet, then we can convert it into inches. So to convert it into feet, we
just have to remember that there are 3 feet for
every 1 yard. So let me write that down. There are 3 feet per yard. And if we were to multiply 9/2
yards times 3 feet, this yard would be in the numerator. It'd be divided by this yard,
and they would cancel out, and we'd just be left with feet. So we know we have
to multiply by 3. You can say this is 3 feet for
every 1 yard, if it makes it simple, or just 3
feet per yard. Another way to think about it
is however many yards you have, you're going to have
more feet, right? There are 3 feet per yard. So if I have 1 yard, I'm
going to have 3 feet. If I'm going to have 2 yards,
I'm going to have 6 feet. So you should always think about
it in your head, OK,, well, yeah, multiplying by 3. So that also makes sense. So if we multiply by 3
right over here the 9 times 3 is 27/2. Let me write it out. Let me take it step by step,
not skipping any steps. So this is equal to 9/2
times 3/1 yards. This yards right here,
I'll do it in orange. Yards times feet per yards. The yards cancel out, and you're
left with 9 times 3 is equal to 27/2 feet. So we figured out 4 and 1/2
yards is 27/2 feet. And that makes sense because
we should have more feet than yards. And actually, this should
be three times more, so everything makes sense. 27/2 is 3 times 9/2. So now we have 27/2 feet,
and now we want to convert this to inches. And we just have to remember
there are 12 inches per yard. And we're going to want to
multiply by 12, because however many feet we have, we're
going to have 12 times as many inches. If we have 1 foot, we're
going to have 12 inches, 2 feet, 24 inches. 27/2 feet, we're going to
multiply it by 12 to get the number of inches. Since this is going to be times
12, and we'll make sure the dimensions work out:
12 inches per foot. And the feet and the foot, this
is just the plural and the singular of the same word. It's the same dimension. This will cancel out. So this will be-- if we just
rearrange the multiplication, view it as everything is getting
multiplied, and when you just multiply a bunch of
things, order doesn't matter. So this is equal to 27/2
times 12 feet. I'm just swapping the order. Feet times inches divided by
feet, or foot, just the singular of the same word. The feet and the foot cancel
out, they're the same unit. And you have 27 times 12
divided by 2 inches. And what we could do here is
that our final answer is going to be 27 times 12/2 inches. And before we multiply the 27
times 12 and then divide by 2, you immediately see, well, I can
just divide 12 by 2, and 2 by 2, and it makes our
computation simpler. 12 divided by 2 is 6,
2 divided by 2 is 1. It becomes 27 times 6 inches,
and let's figure out what that is. 27 times 6. 7 times 6 is 42. 2 times 6 is 12, plus 4 is 16. This is equal to 162 inches,
which makes sense. 4 and 1/2 yards, that gets us to
this number right here: 27 divided by 2 is 13
and 1/2 feet. You multiply that by
12, it makes sense. You're going to have
a bunch of inches. 162 inches.