Lesson 18

Equivalent Ratios Have the Same Unit Rates

Lesson Narrative

The purpose of this lesson is to make it explicit to students that equivalent ratios have the same unit rates. For instance, students can see that the ratios \(10:4\), \(15:6\), and \(20:8\) all have unit rates of \(\frac25\) and \(\frac52\). Interpreted in a context, this might mean, for example, that no matter how many ounces of raisins are purchased in bulk and how much is paid, the price per ounce will always match the \$0.40 per ounce rate marked on the price label.

A table. A. B. 

This understanding gives new insights as students reason with tables. Up to this point, students have often been reasoning about the relationship from row to row, understanding that the rows contain equivalent ratios and the values in any row can be found by multiplying both quantities in another row by a scale factor. Here students see that they can also reason across columns, because the unit rate is the factor that relates the values in one column to those in the other (MP8). In grade 7, students will call the unit rate the constant of proportionality and write equations of the form \(y=kx\) to characterize these relationships.

Later in the lesson, students practice using unit rates and tables of equivalent ratios to find unknown quantities and compare rates in context.


Teacher Notes for IM 6–8 Accelerated
Due to the sequence in IM 6–8 Math Accelerated, the work with constant of proportionality referenced in the lesson narrative is in a later unit in this course and not in Grade 7 as stated.

Learning Goals

Teacher Facing

  • Apply reasoning about unit rates to complete a table of equivalent ratios, and explain (orally and in writing) the solution method.
  • Explain (orally) that if two ratios are equivalent, they have the same rate per 1.
  • Generalize that the unit rate is the factor that takes you from one column to the other column in a table of equivalent ratios.

Student Facing

Let’s revisit equivalent ratios.

Learning Targets

Student Facing

  • I can give an example of two equivalent ratios and show that they have the same unit rates.
  • I can multiply or divide by the unit rate to calculate missing values in a table of equivalent ratios.

CCSS Standards

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