RP Unit 1 a Ratios Proportional Reasoning Greatest

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RP Unit 1 a: Ratios & Proportional Reasoning

RP Unit 1 a: Ratios & Proportional Reasoning

Greatest Common Factor • A factor is a number that you multiply by another

Greatest Common Factor • A factor is a number that you multiply by another number to get a product. Example: 3 and 12 are factors of 36 Find the GCF of 32 and 60 1. List the factors of both numbers 32: 1 2 4 8 16 32 60: 1 2 3 4 5 6 10 15 20 30 2. Find the common factors 32: 1 2 4 8 16 32 60: 1 2 3 4 5 6 10 12 15 20 30 60 3. Select the greatest common factor. . . 4

Least Common Multiple • A multiple is a product of two factors. Example: 45

Least Common Multiple • A multiple is a product of two factors. Example: 45 is a multiple of 5 Find the LCM of 6 and 8 1. List the first five multiples of both numbers 6: 6 12 18 24 30 8: 8 16 24 32 40 2. Find the least common multiple of the two numbers 6: 6 12 18 24 30 8: 8 16 24 32 40 3. If you haven’t found a common multiple, continue to find multiples of each number until you find one.

Ratio •

Ratio •

Ratio •

Ratio •

Ratio • We can use ratios to divide something into equal groups. George wants

Ratio • We can use ratios to divide something into equal groups. George wants to divide his 42 baseball cards into two groups so that the ratio is 3 to 4. 1. Use a bar diagram to show a ratio of 3 to 4. 42 2. Divide the total by the number of equal sections to find out how many units are in each section 42 ÷ 7 = 6 Each section is equal to 6 units.

Ratio 3. Since each unit is equal to 6, our ratio is 18 to

Ratio 3. Since each unit is equal to 6, our ratio is 18 to 24 6 6 6 6 42

Rates • A rate is a ratio that compares two quantities with different kinds

Rates • A rate is a ratio that compares two quantities with different kinds of units. Example: miles per hour, price per pound, beats per minute per means “for every” I biked 15 miles per hour means for every hour I biked, I traveled 15 miles.

Unit Rates • A unit rate is a rate where the second unit is

Unit Rates • A unit rate is a rate where the second unit is 1. Example: miles per hour means mile per 1 hour 12 gallons of water ran out of the faucet in 3 minutes. Write this rate as a unit rate. ÷ 3 12 gallons = ? gallons 3 minutes 1 minute ÷ 3 The water came out of the faucet at a rate of 4 gallons per minute.

Unit Prices • A unit price is the cost per unit. Example: $3. 99

Unit Prices • A unit price is the cost per unit. Example: $3. 99 per pound means each pound costs $3. 99 6 pounds of chicken cost $18. What is the price per pound? ÷ 6 $18 = ? price 6 lb 1 lb ÷ 6 Each pound of chicken costs $3.

Use Unit Rates to Make Comparisons Jim ran 21 laps of a track in

Use Unit Rates to Make Comparisons Jim ran 21 laps of a track in 7 minutes. Ben ran 36 laps of the same track in 9 minutes. Which boy ran at a faster rate? ÷ 7 ÷ 9 Jim’s rate 21 laps= ? laps Ben’s rate 36 laps= ? laps 7 min 1 min 9 min 1 min ÷ 7 ÷ 9 Jim ran 3 laps in 1 minute. Ben rate 4 laps in 1 minute. Ben ran at a faster rate.

Ratio Tables A ratio table has columns filled with pairs of numbers that have

Ratio Tables A ratio table has columns filled with pairs of numbers that have the same ratio. A coed soccer team has a ratio of 4 boys for every 1 girl. If there are 16 boys on the team, how many players are girls? x 2 x 3 x 4 # of boys 4 8 12 16 # of girls 1 2 3 4 x 2 x 3 x 4

Ratio Tables You may need to scale back in order to scale forward in

Ratio Tables You may need to scale back in order to scale forward in a ratio table. To make strawberry jam you need 8 cups of sugar for every 14 cups of strawberries. How many cups of sugar would you need with 21 cups of strawberries? There is no whole number by which you can multiply 8 to get 12. x 3 ÷ 2 # of boys 8 4 12 # of girls 14 7 21 ÷ 2 x 3

Ratios on the Coordinate Plane Coordinate plane – a plane where a horizontal number

Ratios on the Coordinate Plane Coordinate plane – a plane where a horizontal number (x-axis) intersects with a vertical number line (y-axis) at their zero points. The point of intersection is called the origin. Ordered pair – a pair of numbers used to locate a point on the coordinate plane. The ordered pair is written as (x-coordinate, y-coordinate). The ordered pair for point A is (3, 5). x-coordinate - the first number in an ordered pair y-coordinate - the second number in an ordered pair

Ratios on the Coordinate Plane How many cups of chocolate chips do Sarah and

Ratios on the Coordinate Plane How many cups of chocolate chips do Sarah and Tyreak need to make 1 batch of cookies? How many cups do they need to make 2 batches? 3 batches?

Ratios on the Coordinate Plane Make a ratio table to show the ratio of

Ratios on the Coordinate Plane Make a ratio table to show the ratio of the number of batches to cups of chocolate chips. # of batches Cups of chips 0 0 1 2 2 4 3 6 4 8 5 10 6 12

Ratios on the Coordinate Plane Graph the table. # of batches, x Cups of

Ratios on the Coordinate Plane Graph the table. # of batches, x Cups of chips, y Ordered pairs, (x, y) 0 0 (0, 0) 1 2 (1, 2) 2 4 (2, 4) 3 6 (3, 6) 4 8 (4, 8) 5 10 (5, 10) 6 12 (6, 12) Describe the pattern. The graph shows that 2 cups of chocolate chips are needed for each batch of cookies.

Equivalent Ratios Two ways to determine if ratios or rates are equivalent are to

Equivalent Ratios Two ways to determine if ratios or rates are equivalent are to use unit rates or multiply or divide one ratio to try to equal the other. Find Unit Rates – find the unit rate of each ratio. If the unit rates are equal, the rates are equivalent. 20 cans = 5 cans 36 cans = 6 cans $4 $1 $6 $1 Since 5 cans for $1 is not the same unit rate as 6 cans for $1, the rates are not equal.

Equivalent Ratios Two ways to determine if ratios or rates are equivalent are to

Equivalent Ratios Two ways to determine if ratios or rates are equivalent are to use unit rates or multiply or divide one ratio to try to equal the other. Multiply or divide – if you can multiply (or divide) both terms of a ratio by the same number to equal the other ratio, the ratios are equal. Is 6 goals from 13 shots on goal equivalent to 12 goals from 23 shots on goal? 6 x 2 = 12 but 13 x 2 ≠ 23 x 2 6 goals ? 12 goals so the ratios are not 13 attempts = 23 attempts equivalent. x 2

Double Number Lines We can use double number lines to solve ratio or rate

Double Number Lines We can use double number lines to solve ratio or rate problems. 3 lbs of chicken costs $9. How much does 4 lbs of chicken cost at the same rate? Step 1: Find the unit rate ÷ 3 Step 2: Multiply by the price for 1 lb x 4