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In this Warm-up students are given an unlabeled graph of a proportional relationship and asked to invent a situation that it could represent. This gives students an opportunity to think back to examples of proportional relationships they have encountered. After several possible contexts are shared, students label the axes of the graph, give it a title, and interpret the meaning of a point on the graph. This is an opportunity for students to attend to precision in language (MP6). During the discussion, the characteristics of a graph of a proportional relationship are reinforced.
Tell students that they will look at an unlabeled graph, and their job is to think of a situation that the graph could represent. Display the problem stem for all to see and give 1 minute of quiet think time. Ask students to give a signal when they have thought of a situation.
Invite some students to share their ideas and record the responses for all to see. The purpose of this is to provide some inspiration to students who haven't come up with anything.
Ask students how they know all of the relationships are proportional. (When one value is 0, the other is 0. The situation involves equivalent ratios. Any pair of values in the relationship has the same unit rate.)
Ask students to complete the questions.
Here is a graph that represents a proportional relationship.
Invent a situation that could be represented by this graph.
Ask a few students to share their situations and other responses. After each, ask the class if they need more information to understand the situation. After a few students have shared, ask the class to think about how all the situations were different and what they had in common. What sorts of things are always true about proportional relationships? Some possible responses might be:
Remind students that a coordinate point, is made up of the “-coordinate” and the “-coordinate.”
In this activity students interpret points on the graph of a proportional relationship in terms of what they mean about the situation (MP2). This activity is intended to further students’ understanding of the graphs of proportional relationships in the following respects:
Students explain correspondences between parts of the table and parts of the graph. The graph is simple so that students can focus on what a point means in the situation represented. Students need to realize, however, that the axes are marked in 10-unit intervals.
Arrange students in groups of 2. Give students 5 minutes of quiet work time, followed by partner and whole-class discussion.
Tyler was at the amusement park. He walked at a steady pace from the ticket booth to the bumper cars.
The point on the graph shows his arrival at the bumper cars. What do the coordinates of the point tell us about the situation?
| time (seconds) |
distance (meters) |
|---|---|
| 0 | 0 |
| 20 | 25 |
| 30 | 37.5 |
| 40 | 50 |
| 1 |
The goal of the discussion is to make connections between the table and the graph and how they each represent the situation. First, ask students:
Consider clarifying for students that this is assuming that Tyler walked in a straight line. This is an opportunity for attention to precision (MP6) and making explicit assumptions about a situation (MP4).
For each of the following questions, ask students to share how they can tell the answer from the table and how they can tell from the graph.
After students have seen how the different representations show the same information, consider asking students, “Are there any benefits or drawbacks to one representation compared to the other? Which representation do you prefer?”
Lastly, ask students to write an equation for this proportional relationship. (Sample responses: or )
In this activity students create the graph of a proportional relationship given only one pair of values. Then they use the graph to find the constant of proportionality and interpret it in context.
In previous activities students were given a table with multiple pairs of values to graph. Being given only one pair of values here reinforces the idea that the graph of any proportional relationship makes a straight line through the origin. This activity asks students to connect the points with a solid line. The class discussion revisits the idea that people often connect discrete points with a line to make the relationship more clear, even when the in-between values don’t make sense.
In the digital version of the activity, students use an applet to graph a proportional relationship on the coordinate plane. The applet allows students to plot points and draw lines. The digital version may help students graph quickly and accurately so they can focus more on the mathematical analysis.
Keep students in the same groups. Give 5 minutes of quiet work time followed by partner and whole-class discussion.
4 seagulls ate 10 pounds of garbage. Assume this information describes a proportional relationship.
Invite students to share their value and interpretation of . Ask them for different ways to express this information. (Each seagull eats 2.5 pounds of garbage. Or the rate of garbage consumption is 2.5 pounds per seagull.)
Ask students:
Share with students, “Today we practiced interpreting the points on a graph in terms of the context it represents.”
If desired, use this example to review these concepts.
For the relationship represented in this table, is proportional to . We can see in this table that is the constant of proportionality because it’s the value when is 1.
The equation also represents this relationship.
| 4 | 5 |
| 5 | |
| 8 | 10 |
| 1 |
Here is the graph of this relationship.
If represents the distance in feet that a snail crawls in minutes, then the point tells us that the snail can crawl 5 feet in 4 minutes.
If represents the cups of yogurt and represents the teaspoons of cinnamon in a recipe for fruit dip, then the point tells us that you can mix 4 teaspoons of cinnamon with 5 cups of yogurt to make this fruit dip.
We can find the constant of proportionality by looking at the graph: is the -coordinate of the point on the graph where the -coordinate is 1. This could mean the snail is traveling feet per minute or that the recipe calls for cups of yogurt for every teaspoon of cinnamon.
In general, when is proportional to , the corresponding constant of proportionality is the -value when .
If students struggle to find , encourage them to create a table with a few rows in it and ask them how they can use the table to find .