Learn on PengiAoPS: Introduction to Algebra (AMC 8 & 10)Chapter 7: Proportion

Lesson 1: Direct Proportion

In this Grade 4 AoPS Introduction to Algebra lesson, students learn the concept of direct proportion, including how to identify the constant of proportionality and use the relationship x/y = k to solve for unknown values. The lesson covers practical applications such as using shadow lengths to calculate the height of objects and scaling medicine dosages by weight. It draws on students' prior ratio skills to build fluency with both algebraic and arithmetic approaches to proportion problems, in preparation for AMC 8 and AMC 10 competition math.

Section 1

Proportional Variables

Property

Two variables are said to be proportional if their ratio is constant, or always the same. This means one variable is a constant multiple of the other. To check if two variables are proportional, you can identify several pairs of corresponding values for the variables, and then compute their ratios to see if they are equal.

Examples

  • A baker uses 3 cups of sugar for every 2 dozen muffins. The amount of sugar is proportional to the number of dozens of muffins because the ratio 32\frac{3}{2} is constant.
  • A taxi fare includes a 3 dollars flat fee plus 2 dollars per mile. The total cost is not proportional to the miles driven because the ratio of cost to miles changes. For 2 miles, the ratio is 2×2+32=3.5\frac{2 \times 2 + 3}{2} = 3.5, but for 5 miles it is 2×5+35=2.6\frac{2 \times 5 + 3}{5} = 2.6.
  • The perimeter of a regular octagon is given by the formula P=8sP = 8s, where ss is the side length. The perimeter is proportional to the side length because the ratio Ps=8\frac{P}{s} = 8 is always constant.

Explanation

Think of it like this: if two variables are proportional, they are partners that always move together at a steady pace. If you double one variable, the other one doubles too. Their relationship is perfectly predictable and consistent.

Section 2

Proportional variables

Property

Two variables are proportional if their ratio is always the same. If two variables are proportional, they are related by the equation

y=kxy = kx

where kk is the constant of proportionality.

Book overview

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Chapter 7: Proportion

  1. Lesson 1Current

    Lesson 1: Direct Proportion

  2. Lesson 2

    Lesson 2: Inverse Proportion

  3. Lesson 3

    Lesson 3: Joint Proportion

  4. Lesson 4

    Lesson 4: Rate Problems

Lesson overview

Expand to review the lesson summary and core properties.

Expand

Section 1

Proportional Variables

Property

Two variables are said to be proportional if their ratio is constant, or always the same. This means one variable is a constant multiple of the other. To check if two variables are proportional, you can identify several pairs of corresponding values for the variables, and then compute their ratios to see if they are equal.

Examples

  • A baker uses 3 cups of sugar for every 2 dozen muffins. The amount of sugar is proportional to the number of dozens of muffins because the ratio 32\frac{3}{2} is constant.
  • A taxi fare includes a 3 dollars flat fee plus 2 dollars per mile. The total cost is not proportional to the miles driven because the ratio of cost to miles changes. For 2 miles, the ratio is 2×2+32=3.5\frac{2 \times 2 + 3}{2} = 3.5, but for 5 miles it is 2×5+35=2.6\frac{2 \times 5 + 3}{5} = 2.6.
  • The perimeter of a regular octagon is given by the formula P=8sP = 8s, where ss is the side length. The perimeter is proportional to the side length because the ratio Ps=8\frac{P}{s} = 8 is always constant.

Explanation

Think of it like this: if two variables are proportional, they are partners that always move together at a steady pace. If you double one variable, the other one doubles too. Their relationship is perfectly predictable and consistent.

Section 2

Proportional variables

Property

Two variables are proportional if their ratio is always the same. If two variables are proportional, they are related by the equation

y=kxy = kx

where kk is the constant of proportionality.

Book overview

Jump across lessons in the current chapter without opening the full course modal.

Continue this chapter

Chapter 7: Proportion

  1. Lesson 1Current

    Lesson 1: Direct Proportion

  2. Lesson 2

    Lesson 2: Inverse Proportion

  3. Lesson 3

    Lesson 3: Joint Proportion

  4. Lesson 4

    Lesson 4: Rate Problems