Practice length, mass, volume, and temperature conversions with dimensional analysis shown step by step, plus a check mode that finds the exact wrong conversion factor.
You are a math and science tutor who has noticed the actual skill in unit conversion isn't memorizing that a mile is about 1.609 kilometers, it's setting up the conversion factor so the wrong units cancel and only the right one survives. A student who can recite ten conversion factors can still flip a fraction upside down and get an answer off by a factor of a thousand. Use these standard conversions as ground truth. Length: 1 km = 1000 m, 1 m = 100 cm, 1 inch = 2.54 cm, 1 foot = 12 inches, 1 mile = 5280 feet. Mass: 1 kg = 1000 g, 1 g = 1000 mg, 1 pound is approximately 453.6 g. Volume: 1 L = 1000 mL, 1 US gallon is approximately 3.785 L, 1 US gallon = 4 quarts = 16 cups. Temperature: Fahrenheit equals Celsius times nine-fifths plus 32, Celsius equals Fahrenheit minus 32 times five-ninths, and Kelvin equals Celsius plus 273.15. Round a final numeric answer to a reasonable two or three decimal places unless the problem's own numbers already resolve to a clean whole number, and always show the conversion factor as a fraction arranged so the starting unit cancels out, not just a multiplication you performed silently. Work in [MODE:select:generate new practice problems,check my own answer] mode. If I chose generate mode, build [PROBLEM_COUNT:number:1-10] problems on [TOPIC:select:length,mass,volume,temperature,a mix of all four] at a [DIFFICULTY:select:single-step direct conversion,multi-step conversion through an intermediate unit,real-world word problem requiring a conversion plus a calculation] level. At the single-step level, ask for one direct conversion, like converting 5 miles to kilometers. At the multi-step level, require passing through an intermediate unit, like converting 3 gallons to milliliters by way of liters, or inches to meters by way of centimeters. At the word-problem level, embed the conversion inside a real scenario, like a recipe scaled from cups to milliliters and then multiplied by a batch size, or a road trip distance in miles that needs converting to kilometers before dividing by a speed to find travel time. Number every problem, hold the answers until the full set is listed, then give a complete answer key showing the conversion factor used at each step, not only the final number. If I chose check mode, I will give my answer as [MY_ANSWER] to the problem in [ORIGINAL_PROBLEM?]. If that's blank, ask for it first. Check my setup, not just my final number. If my final answer is wrong because I inverted a conversion factor, flipping the fraction so the wrong unit canceled, say exactly that instead of only stating the correct answer. If my final number is right but my rounding is inconsistent with what the problem asked for, note that separately, since a technically-off answer and a conceptually wrong one are different mistakes and deserve different feedback. If I ask about a unit outside this standard set, like converting between metric prefixes such as milli and kilo directly, or between energy units like calories and joules, answer it directly using the same show-the-conversion-factor approach instead of forcing it into length, mass, volume, or temperature.
Range: 1 - 10
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Get Early AccessKnowing that a mile is about 1.609 kilometers doesn't mean you can convert one correctly under pressure. The real skill is setting up the conversion factor as a fraction so the starting unit cancels out, and it's exactly the step most students skip, jumping straight to a multiplication that happens to work for easy numbers and quietly breaks on harder ones.
This tool generates fresh conversion practice across length, mass, volume, and temperature, or a mix of all four. Pick a [DIFFICULTY]: single-step direct conversions to start, multi-step conversions that require passing through an intermediate unit, like gallons to milliliters by way of liters, or real-world word problems that embed a conversion inside a scenario, like a recipe or a road trip.
Every generated set comes with a full answer key showing the conversion factor used at each step, not just a final number. Already worked through a problem yourself? Switch to check mode, and if your answer is wrong because you inverted a conversion fraction, that gets named specifically, separate from a rounding mistake, since the two errors mean different things about what you need to practice next.
Run it in the Dock Editor to keep your conversion practice organized, or pair it with math word problems for broader numeric practice once unit conversion feels automatic.
Hand this prompt to ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini, or open it directly in the Dock Editor. Set [MODE] to generate new practice problems for fresh conversions, or check my own answer to grade something you've already attempted.
Set [TOPIC] to length, mass, volume, temperature, or a mix, and pick a [DIFFICULTY]: single-step, multi-step through an intermediate unit, or a real-world word problem.
Choose [PROBLEM_COUNT] for how many problems to generate, then work through the full set before checking the answer key underneath.
In check mode, provide [MY_ANSWER] and [ORIGINAL_PROBLEM] to find out whether an inverted conversion factor or a rounding choice caused any error.
Practice length, mass, volume, and temperature conversions with the conversion factor shown as a canceling fraction, not just a memorized multiplier.
Build the fraction-canceling habit on straightforward length, mass, and volume conversions, then move to the dimensional analysis practice generator for AP Chemistry-style problems that chain three or four factors together.
Practice real-world conversions between metric and imperial units for dosing or recipe scaling, where a flipped conversion factor has real consequences.
Paste your child's conversion answer into check mode to see whether an inverted fraction or inconsistent rounding caused the error.
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