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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 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 Our Class? How will we measure our rate of passing out papers? What quantities will we use to describe our rate?
MODEL: Ratio Column • Teacher: Trial 1 • Class: Trial 2 • Partner: Trial 3
Discussion • What was the ratio from the first trial? • What was the ratio in the third trial? • Are these two ratios equivalent? Explain.
Review Key Vocabulary • A rate is a ratio of different units. Example: A unit rate is a rate with a denominator of 1. Example:
MODEL: Rate & Unit Rate Columns • Teacher: Trial 1 • Class: Trial 2 • Partner: Trial 3
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?
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.
Review Key Vocabulary A ratio is a comparison of two numbers by division. Example: , 60: 3, 60 to 3
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.
MODEL: Ratio of Boys to Girls Column • Teacher: Period 1 • Class: Period 3 • Partner: Period 5 & All
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?
Review Key Vocabulary Equivalent ratios have different numbers but represent the same relationship. Example:
Extension Write down two equivalent ratios comparing boys to girls from our class. Explain your process.
Exit Ticket – Day 2 How do the equivalent ratios compare to the ratio of ALL boys: ALL girls? What does this mean?
Review Key Vocabulary • A rate is a ratio of different units. Example: A unit rate is a rate with a denominator of 1. Example:
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
Lesson Summary How is finding a rate or unit rate helpful when making comparisons between quantities?
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