Learn on PengiPengi Math (Grade 6)Chapter 3: Ratios, Rates, and Percent

Lesson 1: Understanding Ratios and Ratio Language

In this Grade 6 lesson from Pengi Math, students learn to define a ratio as a comparison of two quantities and express ratios in three forms: a:b, a to b, and a/b. The lesson emphasizes ratio language such as "for every" and "to," and explains why the order of terms matters when writing and interpreting ratios. Students also apply their understanding by interpreting ratios in real-world contexts and identifying what each term represents.

Section 1

Representing Ratios

Property

A ratio is commonly described as a pair of positive numbers, written a:ba : b and read as “aa to bb.” When describing a ratio, the order of the quantities must be the same as the order of the numbers.

Examples

  • In a garden, there are 5 rose bushes for every 2 lilac bushes. The ratio of roses to lilacs is 5:2.
  • A pancake recipe requires 2 cups of flour for every 1 cup of milk. The ratio of flour to milk is 2:1.
  • For every 3 games the team wins, they lose 1. The ratio of wins to losses is 3:1.

Explanation

A ratio is a recipe for comparing two amounts. It tells you, "for every this, you have that." The order is critical—a ratio of 2:3 is not the same as 3:2, just like putting on shoes then socks doesn't work!

Section 2

Writing Ratios in Three Notations

Property

A ratio compares two numbers or two quantities that are measured with the same unit. The ratio of aa to bb is written aa to bb, ab\frac{a}{b}, or a:ba:b.

Examples

  • The ratio 20 to 36 can be written as 20 to 3620\ \text{to}\ 36, 20:3620:36, and 2036\frac{20}{36}.
  • The ratio 45 to 18 can be written as 45 to 1845\ \text{to}\ 18, 45:1845:18, and 4518\frac{45}{18}.

Book overview

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

Continue this chapter

Chapter 3: Ratios, Rates, and Percent

  1. Lesson 1Current

    Lesson 1: Understanding Ratios and Ratio Language

  2. Lesson 2

    Lesson 2: Equivalent Ratios and Scaling

  3. Lesson 3

    Lesson 3: Solving Ratio Problems with Models

  4. Lesson 4

    Lesson 4: Rates and Unit Rates

  5. Lesson 5

    Lesson 5: Comparing Ratios and Rates

  6. Lesson 6

    Lesson 6: Understanding and Converting Percents

  7. Lesson 7

    Lesson 7: Solving Percent Problems

Lesson overview

Expand to review the lesson summary and core properties.

Expand

Section 1

Representing Ratios

Property

A ratio is commonly described as a pair of positive numbers, written a:ba : b and read as “aa to bb.” When describing a ratio, the order of the quantities must be the same as the order of the numbers.

Examples

  • In a garden, there are 5 rose bushes for every 2 lilac bushes. The ratio of roses to lilacs is 5:2.
  • A pancake recipe requires 2 cups of flour for every 1 cup of milk. The ratio of flour to milk is 2:1.
  • For every 3 games the team wins, they lose 1. The ratio of wins to losses is 3:1.

Explanation

A ratio is a recipe for comparing two amounts. It tells you, "for every this, you have that." The order is critical—a ratio of 2:3 is not the same as 3:2, just like putting on shoes then socks doesn't work!

Section 2

Writing Ratios in Three Notations

Property

A ratio compares two numbers or two quantities that are measured with the same unit. The ratio of aa to bb is written aa to bb, ab\frac{a}{b}, or a:ba:b.

Examples

  • The ratio 20 to 36 can be written as 20 to 3620\ \text{to}\ 36, 20:3620:36, and 2036\frac{20}{36}.
  • The ratio 45 to 18 can be written as 45 to 1845\ \text{to}\ 18, 45:1845:18, and 4518\frac{45}{18}.

Book overview

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

Continue this chapter

Chapter 3: Ratios, Rates, and Percent

  1. Lesson 1Current

    Lesson 1: Understanding Ratios and Ratio Language

  2. Lesson 2

    Lesson 2: Equivalent Ratios and Scaling

  3. Lesson 3

    Lesson 3: Solving Ratio Problems with Models

  4. Lesson 4

    Lesson 4: Rates and Unit Rates

  5. Lesson 5

    Lesson 5: Comparing Ratios and Rates

  6. Lesson 6

    Lesson 6: Understanding and Converting Percents

  7. Lesson 7

    Lesson 7: Solving Percent Problems