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The purpose of this Warm-up is to elicit comparisons of lengths and areas, which will be useful when students decide whether such relationships are proportional in a later activity. While students may notice and wonder many things about these images, the important discussion points are the way that the side lengths, perimeter, and area are increasing.
When students articulate what they notice and wonder, they have an opportunity to attend to precision in the language they use to describe what they see (MP6). They might first propose less formal or imprecise language, and then restate their observation with more precise language in order to communicate more clearly.
Arrange students in groups of 2. Display the image for all to see. Ask students to think of at least one thing they notice and at least one thing they wonder. Give students 1 minute of quiet think time, and then 1 minute to discuss the things they notice and wonder with their partner.
What do you notice? What do you wonder?
Ask students to share the things they noticed and wondered. Record and display their responses for all to see without editing or commentary. If possible, record the relevant reasoning on or near the image. Next, ask students, “Is there anything on this list that you are wondering about now?” Encourage students to respectfully disagree, ask for clarification, or point out contradicting information.
If the idea of continuing the pattern does not come up during the conversation, ask students to discuss this idea: “What predictions can you make about future rectangles in the set if the pattern continues?”
In this activity students use equations to create tables and decide whether the relationships are proportional. Students have previously looked at measurement conversions that can be represented by proportional relationships. This task introduces a measurement conversion that is not associated with a proportional relationship.
Monitor for students who use these different strategies to justify whether each relationship is proportional:
Arrange students in groups of 2. Provide access to calculators, if desired. Give students 5 minutes of quiet work time followed by partner and whole-class discussion.
Select work from students with different strategies, such as those described in the Activity Narrative, to share later.
The other day you worked with converting meters, centimeters, and millimeters. Here are some more unit conversions.
| temperature | temperature |
|---|---|
| 20 | |
| 4 | |
| 175 |
| length (in) | length (cm) |
|---|---|
| 10 | |
| 8 | |
Some students may struggle with the fraction in the temperature conversion. Teachers can prompt them to convert the fraction to its decimal form, 1.8, before trying to evaluate the equation for the values in the table.
Some students may think of the two scales on a thermometer like a double number line diagram, leading them to believe that the relationship between degrees Celsius and degrees Fahrenheit is proportional. Point out that when a double number line is used to represent a set of equivalent ratios, the tick marks for 0 on each line need to be aligned.
The goal of this discussion is to start to move students from determining whether a relationship is proportional by examining a table, to making the determination from the equation. Display 2–3 approaches from previously selected students for all to see. Use Compare and Connect to help students compare, contrast, and connect the different approaches. Here are some questions for discussion:
The key takeaway is that the equation for the proportional relationship is of the form , while the equation for the nonproportional relationship is not.
This activity uses a geometric context to give students more practice with deciding whether relationships are proportional. The context of surface area and volume of a cube should be familiar from grade 6.
The units for the quantities are purposely not given in the task statement to avoid giving away which relationships are not proportional. However, discussion should raise the possible units of measurement for edge length, surface area, and volume.
Arrange students in groups of 2. Display a cube (such as a cardboard box) for all to see and ask:
Give students 5 minutes of quiet work time, followed by partner and whole-class discussion.
Watch carefully as students work and be ready to provide guidance or equations as needed, so students can get to the central purpose of the task, which is noticing the correspondences between the nature of relationships and the form of their equations.
Here are some cubes with different side lengths. Complete each table. Be prepared to explain your reasoning.
| side length |
total edge length |
|---|---|
| 3 | |
| 5 | |
| side length |
surface area |
|---|---|
| 3 | |
| 5 | |
| side length |
volume |
|---|---|
| 3 | |
| 5 | |
Write equations for the total edge length , total surface area , and volume of a cube with side length .
Some students may struggle to complete the tables. Teachers can use nets of cubes (flat or assembled) partitioned into square units to reinforce the process for finding total edge length, surface area, and volume of the cubes in the task. Snap cubes would also be appropriate supports.
If difficulties with the fractional side length keep students from being able to find the surface area and volume or write the equations, the teacher can tell those students to replace with 10 and retry their calculations. Their answers for surface area and volume will be different for that row in the table, but their equations and proportionality decisions will be the same. That way they can still learn the connection between the form of the equations and the nature of the relationships.
The goal of the discussion is for students to recognize that the proportional relationship has an equation of the form while the nonproportional relationships do not.
Direct students' attention to the reference created using Collect and Display. Ask students to share what they notice about the equations for the relationships. Invite students to borrow language from the display as needed and update the reference to include additional phrases as they respond. Display words and phrases such as “factor,” “number next to the variable,” “coefficient,” “exponent,” “operation,” “not proportional.” Make sure students see that the equation for the proportional relationship is of the form , and the others are not.
If time permits, consider asking:
Connect the units of measurements with the structure of the equation for each quantity: the variable that represents the side length and the units are raised to the same power.
Optional
This activity involves checking for a constant of proportionality in tables generated from simple equations. Students should be able to evaluate these equations from their work with expressions and equations in grade 6. The purpose of this activity is to generalize about the forms of equations that do and do not represent proportional relationships. The relationships in this activity are presented without a context so that students can focus on the structure of the equations (MP7) without being distracted by what the variables represent.
Arrange students in groups of 2–3. Provide access to calculators.
If time is limited, consider instructing group members to each complete 2–3 of the tables and then share their results with each other. Give students 5 minutes of quiet work time followed by partner and whole-class discussion.
Here are six different equations.
Students might struggle to see that the two proportional relationships have equations of the form and to characterize the others as not having equations of that form. Students do not need to completely articulate this insight for themselves. This synthesis should emerge in the whole-class discussion.
Invite students to share what the equations for proportional relationships have in common, and by contrast, what is different about the other equations.
Use Critique, Correct, Clarify to give students an opportunity to improve a sample written response about which of these equations represent a proportional relationship, by correcting errors, clarifying meaning, and adding details.
The key takeaway is that any equation that can be written in the form represents a proportional relationship. At first glance, the equation does not look like our standard equation for a proportional relationship, . Suggest to students that they rewrite the equation using the constant of proportionality they found after completing the table: which can also be expressed . If students do not express this idea themselves, remind them that they can think of dividing by 4 as multiplying by .
Share with students, “Today we learned some ways to tell whether an equation could represent a proportional relationship.”
To help students generalize about equations of proportional relationships, consider asking students:
Students might say that equations of the form , where is a constant, are also proportional. This is true, however we do not need this additional form to represent proportional relationships of this type. If this comes up, point out that these equations could also be written as , which is in the form of . In this form, we see that .
If two quantities are in a proportional relationship, then their quotient is always the same. This table represents different values of and , two quantities that are in a proportional relationship.
| 20 | 100 | 5 |
| 3 | 15 | 5 |
| 11 | 55 | 5 |
| 1 | 5 | 5 |
Notice that the quotient of and is always 5. To write this as an equation, we could say . If this is true, then . (This doesn’t work if , but it works otherwise.)
If quantity is proportional to quantity , we will always see that has a constant value. This value is the constant of proportionality, which we often refer to as . We can represent this relationship with the equation (as long as is not 0) or .
Note that if an equation cannot be written in this form, then it does not represent a proportional relationship.