1 / 32

Ratios and Rates

Ratios and Rates. October 30, 2013 Mrs. Ford. Warm-up. A restaurant bill will be paid equally between 4 friends. The bill totaled $25.20. How much should each friend pay?. $25.20 / 4 = $6.30. Ratios. Lesson Essential Question: What is a ratio and how is it used in the real world?

caia
Download Presentation

Ratios and Rates

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ratios and Rates October 30, 2013 Mrs. Ford

  2. Warm-up A restaurant bill will be paid equally between 4 friends. The bill totaled $25.20. How much should each friend pay? $25.20 / 4 = $6.30

  3. Ratios Lesson Essential Question: • What is a ratio and how is it used in the real world? Areas of Interaction: • Approaches To Learning • Health and Social Education

  4. Opening • Ohio State Band Things to look for: • Use of Integers, angles, ratio, proportions, reflection, rotation, and scale

  5. What do you know about ratios and rates?

  6. Cellphone Rates Travel Abroad Recipes Mileage

  7. Ratios • A ratio is a comparison of two or more quantities (numbers) and can be written in several different forms. For example, if there were 4 boys and 5 girls in our class today then we could write these two quantities as a ratio, 4/5.” • We could also write this ratio as 4 to 5 or 4:5. These all mean the same thing. We are comparing two quantities, 4 to 5.

  8. Three Ways to Write A Ratio 4/5, 4 to 5, 4:5 • This is an example of a part-to-part ratio. What is the actual ratio of boys to girls in our classroom today?

  9. Would this change if I asked for the ratio of girls to boys? Yes, the numbers would be reversed 5/4

  10. If there were 4 boys and 5 girls in our class today then we could write these two quantities as a ratio, 4/5 • We could use this information to write a part-to-whole ratio, otherwise known as a fraction. • If we put the two parts together, girls and boys, we would say the total is students. • So the ratio of boys to students would be 4/9, since there are 4 boys and 4+5=9 students altogether.

  11. Rates • The third kind of ratio we will talk about in this unit is called a rate, which is a comparison of two different things (different units). • One example of a rate is a speed limit, which compares miles to hours, or miles per hour. Can anyone think of another example of a rate?” • (Examples: miles per gallon, dollars per hour, feet per mile)

  12. Rates • So the three kinds of ratios are: • Part-to-part, • Part-to-whole • Rate • Rates cannot be written as part-to-part ratios or part-to-whole ratios since they are comparing two different units.”

  13. Vocabulary • Ratio, • Part-to-part ratio, • Part-to-whole ratio, • Rate

  14. Classwork • Green Textbook • Page 317-318 – Do the activity, review Example 1, Example 2, and Example 3 • Page 319, problems 2-36 even only

  15. November 6, 2013 Math Mrs. Ford

  16. Warm Up In Mr. Romero’s auto shop class, the ratio of boys to girls is 5:2. If there are 35 students in the class, how many are boys?

  17. Warm Up • In Mr. Romero’s auto shop class, the ratio of boys to girls is 5:2. If there are 35 students in the class, how many are boys? Boys Girls Number of students divided by the number of units 7 units = 35 35/7 = 5 1 unit = 5 5 units of 5 5 x 5 = 25 In Mr. Romero’s class, there are 25 boys.

  18. A rate is a form of ratio in which the two terms are in different units. • For example: price of wheat is $2 for 3 Kgs, then the rate would be $2 for 3 Kgs and the unit of rate would be $/Kg. • Similarly if a car goes 100 miles in 1.5 hour, then the rate is 100 miles per 1.5 hour and unit is miles/hr. • Note that ratios are usually don’t have units.

  19. Unit rate is a rate in which the rate is expressed as a quantity of 1. • Rate has a denominator of 1. • For example, if a car goes 60 miles in 1 hour, then the unit rate is 60 miles per hour. • Other examples are: $5 per kg, 5 steps per second and $80 per barrel.

  20. Unit price is the rate when it is expressed in unit currency like dollar or cent. • An example is price of corn is $2 per ounce and price of petrol is $5 per gallon. Remember that the price is always the numerator and the unit is the denominator.

  21. Converting rate to unit rate/price • Rate can be converted to unit rate simply by dividing the first term by second term. Consider an example: • If a car travels 45 miles in 30 min, what is the rate at which the car is travelling? If we express the rate in miles/hr, the rate would simply be 45 miles/0.5 hr which is 90 miles per hr. If we want to express in miles/minute the rate would be 45/30 = 1.5 miles per minute. 45 ÷ 30 = 1.5

  22. Converting rate to unit rate/price • If John bought 2.5 Kgs of rice for $7.5, then what is the unit price of rice? • Solution: Here the denominator should be 2.5 Kg and numerator is the price $7.5. (7.5/2.5) • The unit price of rice would thus be 7.5 ÷ 2.5 = $3 /Kg.

  23. Rates and unit rates are used to solve many real world problems. It takes 30 minutes for a tap to fill one bucket. How much time would it take to fill 6 buckets? • The problem can be done using the concept of unit rate. The unit rate to fill the buckets would be 1 bucket/0.5 hour which is 2 buckets per hr. • Thus to fill 6 buckets, it would take 6/2 = 3 hours.

  24. Example: 240 miles in 4 hours. = 240 miles/4 hours = 60 miles / 1 hour • Example: Suppose you drove 96 miles to San Francisco in 3 hours. What would be the unit rate? = 96 miles ÷ 3 hours = 32 mph

  25. Example: Suppose you work at a coffee shop and make $9.50 an hour and work 8 hours. How much would you make? $9.50 x 8 hours = $76.00 Suppose you stayed late and worked 10 hours? $9.50 x 10 hours = $95.00 Example: An ice cream cone may be 35 calories per ounce. If the ice cream cone is 7 ounces, how many calories are in the ice cream cone. 35 calories/oz. x 7 ounces = 245 calories Suppose a different cone was 45 calories/ounce. How many calories would be in the whole cone? 45 calories/oz. x 7 ounces = 315 calories

  26. Unit rates can be used to find the better buy • What’s the better buy? A) 12 ounce can of soda for $.84 B) 16 ounce bottle for $1.20 $0.84 ÷ 12 = $0.07/oz. $1.20 ÷ 16 = $0.075/oz. What's the better deal? 16 oz. bottle or 12 oz. can • What’s the better buy? A) 4 oz. Snicker Bar for $0.80 B) 6 oz. Three Musketeers Bar for $0.90 0.80 / 4 = .20/oz Snicker 0.90 / 6 = .15/oz Three Musketeers

  27. Classwork • Blue Textbook • With your partner Investigation 1.1 – Ads That Sell Investigation 1.2 – Targeting an Audience

  28. November 7, 2013 Math Mrs. Ford

  29. Proportions • A proportion is also a way of comparing. But a proportion is a way of comparing two ratios. If the ratios are equal, then we can say that they are “in proportion” or “form a proportion.” • Put in your notebook: A proportion shows that two ratios are equal. Example: 1/6 = 2/12

  30. Proportions Two ways to tell if the ratios form a proportion 1. Cross multiply. If the cross products are equal, then the two ratios do form a proportion. 2. Reduce both ratios to their simplest forms. If they are equal in their simplest form, then they form a proportion.

  31. 3 = 9 7 21 7 x 9 = 63

  32. Activity • For this activity, we are going to do an apple juice taste test that involves ratios

More Related