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Topic A: Proportional Relationships

Topic A: Proportional Relationships. Lesson 1 An Experience in Relationships as Measuring Rate. Review Key Vocabulary. A ratio is a comparison of two numbers by division. Example: , 60: 3, 60 to 3 . Example 1: How Fast is O ur C lass?.

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Topic A: Proportional Relationships

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  1. Topic A: Proportional Relationships Lesson 1 An Experience in Relationships as Measuring Rate

  2. Review Key Vocabulary A ratio is a comparison of two numbers by division. Example: , 60: 3, 60 to 3

  3. Example 1: How Fast is Our Class? How will we measure our rate of passing out papers? What quantities will we use to describe our rate?

  4. MODEL: Ratio Column • Teacher: Trial 1 • Class: Trial 2 • Partner: Trial 3

  5. Discussion • What was the ratio from the first trial? • What was the ratio in the third trial? • Are these two ratios equivalent? Explain.

  6. Review Key Vocabulary • A rate is a ratio of different units. Example: A unit rate is a rate with a denominator of 1. Example:

  7. MODEL: Rate & Unit Rate Columns • Teacher: Trial 1 • Class: Trial 2 • Partner: Trial 3

  8. Extension Let’s say that in another class period students were able to pass 28 papers in 15 seconds. A third class period passed 18 papers in 10 seconds. How do these compare to our fastest unit rate?

  9. Exit Ticket – Day 1 • Describe the difference between the ratio and rate in Example 1. • Describe how we turned the rate into a unit rate in Example 1.

  10. Review Key Vocabulary A ratio is a comparison of two numbers by division. Example: , 60: 3, 60 to 3

  11. Example 2: Our Class by Gender • What are we comparing in this example? • Are the units different? Explain. • Does it matter the order we write the ratio? Explain.

  12. MODEL: Ratio of Boys to Girls Column • Teacher: Period 1 • Class: Period 3 • Partner: Period 5 & All

  13. Discussion • Are the ratios of boys to girls in the three classes equivalent? • What could these ratios tell us? • What does the ratio of boys to girls in Period 1 to all classes tell us? Are they equivalent? • If there is a larger ratio of boys to girls in one class than all classes, what does that mean must be true about the boy/girl ratio in other classes? • How do we compare the ratios when we have varying sizes of quantities?

  14. Review Key Vocabulary Equivalent ratios have different numbers but represent the same relationship. Example:

  15. Extension Write down two equivalent ratios comparing boys to girls from our class. Explain your process.

  16. Exit Ticket – Day 2 How do the equivalent ratios compare to the ratio of ALL boys: ALL girls? What does this mean?

  17. Review Key Vocabulary • A rate is a ratio of different units. Example: A unit rate is a rate with a denominator of 1. Example:

  18. Exercise 1: Which is the Better Buy? Value-Mart is advertising a Back-to-School sale on pencils. A pack of 30 sells for $7.97 whereas a 12-pack of the same brand costs $4.77. Which is the better buy? How do you know? Mathematical Practice: Reason abstractly and quantitatively

  19. Critique Responses

  20. Lesson Summary How is finding a rate or unit rate helpful when making comparisons between quantities?

  21. Problem Set

  22. Extension Watch the video clip of Tillman the English Bulldog, the Guinness World Record holder for Fastest Dog on a Skateboard. • At the conclusion of the video, your classmate takes out his or her calculator and says, “Wow that was amazing! That means the dog went about 5 meters in 1 second!” Is your classmate correct, and how do you know? • After seeing this video, another dog owner trained his dog, Lightning, to try to break Tillman’s skateboarding record. Lightning’s fastest recorded time was on a 75-meter stretch where it took him 15.5 seconds. Based on this data, did Lightning break Tillman’s record for fastest dog on a skateboard? Explain how you know. Video Link

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