FreePrintable

Volume Problems Quiz

A free, printable general worksheet ready for your classroom. Download instantly, print, and hand out to your students — no account needed.

Volume Problems Quiz worksheet preview

Volume Problems Quiz

Worksheet illustration

📘 Learning Targets & Success Criteria

I can calculate volumes of prisms, cylinders, cones, and composite solids.

I can apply unit conversions for volume (e.g., inches ↔ feet, gallons ↔ cubic feet).

Success criteria: Show formulas used, label units, and include all calculation steps in the math-work-boxes provided.

Differentiation strategies: Provide a formula sheet and example problems for students who need extra support; allow a calculator for computation.

Extension activities: Find how changing one dimension by a percent affects volume; compare volumes of similar solids.

Dyslexia-friendly options: Read problems aloud, offer a colored overlay, and present one short sentence per line.

📚 Part 1: Multiple Choice & Concepts

1. What is the volume of a rectangular prism that measures 4 in × 3 in × 6 in?

72 in³

13 in³

14 in³

28 in³

2. A cylinder has radius 3 in and height 5 in. Which is the correct volume?

45π in³

135π in³

15π in³

45 in³

3. A cube has volume 125 in³. What is the edge length?

4 in

5 in

25 in

125 in

4. If every linear dimension of a solid is doubled, what happens to the volume?

The volume doubles.

The volume quadruples.

The volume increases by a factor of 8.

The volume does not change.

5. Check all that apply: Which of the following are units for volume?

square feet

cubic inches

cubic meters

liters

✏️ Part 2: Short Answers (Show all work)

6. A water tank is a cylinder with radius 2 ft and height 6 ft. What is the volume in cubic feet? (Use π in answer.)
7. A box measures 1.5 ft × 10 in × 2 ft. Find the volume in cubic feet. Show unit conversion and work.
8. A rectangular block 6 in × 4 in × 3 in has a cylindrical hole radius 1 in drilled straight through the 3 in height. Find the remaining volume (in in³). Include a quick sketch in the drawing-box and show calculations.
9. The community pool holds 12,000 gallons. Convert this volume to cubic feet. (1 cubic foot = 7.48052 gallons). Show your work.

About This Worksheet

Free Download

No sign-up, no email, no paywall. Just download and print.

Print-Ready

Formatted for standard paper. Clean layout, easy to read.

AI-Generated

Created with Kuraplan's AI, designed for real classroom use.

For Teachers & Parents

Use in classrooms, for homework, tutoring, or homeschool.

Need a custom version of this worksheet?

Kuraplan's AI generates custom worksheets in seconds — differentiated for every learner, aligned to your curriculum.

Generate Custom Worksheets — Free
No credit card Curriculum-aligned Under 60 seconds