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Unit 7: Direct Proportion

Unit 7: Direct Proportion. Direct Proportion Notes. IT / NOT IT. Everyone will look at the IT / NOT IT and decide why you think makes it “IT” or “NOT IT” Write your finding on the paper. Direct Proportion also known as Direct Variation. Consider this:.

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Unit 7: Direct Proportion

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  1. Unit 7: Direct Proportion Direct Proportion Notes

  2. IT / NOT IT • Everyone will look at the IT / NOT IT and decide why you think makes it “IT” or “NOT IT” • Write your finding on the paper.

  3. Direct Proportion also known as Direct Variation

  4. Consider this: On Friday chicken biscuits are sold before school. • Complete the chart to the right. • What number do you think should go in the “?” column? How do you know? $2.50, because every biscuit costs $2.50.

  5. Direct Proportion Defined: The relationship between 2 quantities where one quantity changes based on what happens to the other quantity.

  6. Direct Proportion • Look at the BISCUIT table. • Does the cost per biscuit change? • What affects the total cost? • The number of biscuits determines the total cost. • The number of biscuits is “x” and the total cost is “y”. • What equation could we write to represent the total cost of the biscuits? y = 2.50 x no – it is always $2.50 the # of biscuits

  7. Direct Proportion: Equations • The cost of the biscuits is the same no matter how many you purchase. • Each time the number of biscuits changes, it changes by the same amount….$2.50 per biscuit. It is the constant of proportionality. (k) y = 2.50 x • All equations in a direct proportion are in the form y = k x Constant of Proportionality (AKA: unit rate)

  8. Direct Proportion : Equations What is the constant of proportionality for each of these equations?

  9. Direct Proportion : Graphs • Look at the graph at the bottom of your notes • Take 5 minutes to work with your neighbor to graph the biscuit table • What do you notice about your graph?

  10. Direct Variation and its graph Observations: the graph will always be a straight line The graph will always go through…

  11. the ORIGIN!!!!! (0,0) Special point known as the “ORIGIN”

  12. Tell if the following graph is a Direct Variation or not. Yes No No No

  13. Tell if the following graph is a Direct Variation or not. Yes No No Yes

  14. Direct Proportion: Tables • Spend 5 minutes completing the X-Men Rock! Table. • How did you know what to put for y values?

  15. direct proportion : the table Notice… • As x increases in value, y increases by the same factor …. This “same factor” is theconstant of proportionality. You can find the constant of proportionality k by using k = y/x

  16. Is it a Direct Proportion? Note, x increases: 6 , 7 , 8 and y increases: 12, 14, 16 • Is it a direct proportion? • Find the constant of proportionality for each row using k =y/x.  k = 12/6 or 2 The constant of proportionality in the table above is 2. If all the values are the same it is a Direct Proportion The equation would be y=2x

  17. Is this a direct variation? If yes, give the constant of variation (k) and the equation. No! The k values are different! 75 75

  18. Is this a direct variation? If yes, give the constant of variation (k) and the equation. Yes! k = 10/20 or ½ k= 9/18 or ½ k= 7/14 or ½ k= 4/8 or ½ Equation? y = 1/2 x

  19. Direct Proportion: Word Problems A car uses 8 gallons of gasoline to travel 280 miles. If the gas used and miles driven are proportional, how far will the car go on 10 gallons of gas? 25 gallons of gas? How many gallons are needed to drive 420 miles? • Spend 5 minutes with your neighbor completing the table from the word problem. • What is the constant of proportionality? • What equation would represent the scenario? • What would the graph look like?

  20. constant of proportionality k = 35 • equation: y = 35x • a straight line through the origin

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