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Ratio as a Relationship | Lesson 1 of 2

Ratio as a Relationship

Lesson 1 of 2: Introducing Ratios

In this lesson:

  • Understand what a ratio is — and how it differs from a difference
  • Use ratio language: "for every," "to," "per," "for each"
  • Write ratios in all three notations and classify them as part-to-part or part-to-whole
Grade 6 Math | 6.RP.A.1
Ratio as a Relationship | Lesson 1 of 2

Learning Objectives

By the end of this lesson, you should be able to:

  1. Define a ratio as a relationship between two quantities — not a single number
  2. Use ratio language — "for every," "to," "for each," "per" — to describe a ratio
  3. Write a ratio in all three notations: a to b, a:b, and a/b
  4. Identify whether a ratio is part-to-part or part-to-whole
  5. Explain why a ratio is not the same as a fraction
Grade 6 Math | 6.RP.A.1
Ratio as a Relationship | Lesson 1 of 2

The Candy Jar — What Do You Notice?

Candy jar with 8 yellow and 12 purple candies; left panel shows additive view, right panel shows ratio view

What do you notice about the two colors of candy?

Grade 6 Math | 6.RP.A.1
Ratio as a Relationship | Lesson 1 of 2

Two Ways to Describe: Additive vs. Multiplicative

Additive description: "There are 4 more purple candies than yellow."

→ Tells you the difference

Multiplicative description: "For every 2 yellow candies, there are 3 purple."

→ Tells you the relationship — this is a ratio

Why ratios matter: If you doubled the jar (16 yellow, 24 purple), the difference becomes 8 — but the ratio is still 2 to 3. The relationship stays the same.

Grade 6 Math | 6.RP.A.1
Ratio as a Relationship | Lesson 1 of 2

What Is a Ratio?

A ratio describes how two quantities are related to each other.
It is not a single number — it is a relationship.

Ratio language:

  • "For every 2 yellow, there are 3 purple" → ratio of yellow to purple is 2 to 3
  • "For each beak, there are 2 wings" → ratio of beaks to wings is 1 to 2
  • "3 cups of fruit to 1 cup of yogurt" → ratio of fruit to yogurt is 3 to 1
  • "$12 per hour" → ratio of dollars to hours is 12 to 1
Grade 6 Math | 6.RP.A.1
Ratio as a Relationship | Lesson 1 of 2

Standard Examples: Wings, Beaks, and Votes

Bird example:

  • 2 wings for every 1 beak
  • Ratio of wings to beaks: 2 to 1
  • "For every 2 wings, there is 1 beak" ✓
  • "For every 1 beak, there are 2 wings" ✓ (same relationship, reversed order)

Voting example:

  • For every vote Candidate A received, Candidate C received nearly 3 votes
  • Ratio of A's votes to C's votes: 1 to 3 (approximately)

⚠️ Order matters: "Wings to beaks is 2:1" is different from "beaks to wings is 1:2"

Grade 6 Math | 6.RP.A.1
Ratio as a Relationship | Lesson 1 of 2

Your Turn: Write Ratio Statements

Use "for every" language and write the ratio for each:

1. A recipe uses 4 cups of flour and 2 cups of butter.

For every ___ cups of flour, there are ___ cups of butter.
Ratio of flour to butter: ___ to ___

2. A parking lot has 9 cars and 3 trucks.

For every ___ cars, there is/are ___ truck(s).
Ratio of cars to trucks: ___ to ___

Name the quantities in the order given — match your numbers to the right quantity.

Grade 6 Math | 6.RP.A.1
Ratio as a Relationship | Lesson 1 of 2

Quick Check

Look at this statement: "The ratio of students to teachers is 28 to 2."

Which description is correct?

  • A: There are 26 more students than teachers
  • B: For every 28 students, there are 2 teachers
  • C: There are 28 students and 2 teachers in the whole school

Think: what does a ratio tell you? What is it NOT telling you?

Grade 6 Math | 6.RP.A.1
Ratio as a Relationship | Lesson 1 of 2

Three Ways to Write a Ratio

Three-column diagram: words 'a to b', colon 'a:b', fraction form 'a/b', with conversion arrows and read-as labels

All three notations mean the same thing — choose based on context.

Grade 6 Math | 6.RP.A.1
Ratio as a Relationship | Lesson 1 of 2

Notation Practice

Write each ratio in all three forms:

1. The ratio of girls to boys is "7 to 3"

Words Colon Fraction form
7 to 3 ___ ___

2. A trail mix uses nuts and raisins in a 5:2 ratio

Words Colon Fraction form
___ 5:2 ___

3. Write the ratio of seconds to minutes: 60 seconds for every 1 minute

Words Colon Fraction form
___ ___ ___
Grade 6 Math | 6.RP.A.1
Ratio as a Relationship | Lesson 1 of 2

Part-to-Part vs. Part-to-Whole

Left panel: 5 baseballs and 3 tennis balls with 5:3 part-to-part label; right panel: all 8 balls with 5:8 and 3:8 part-to-whole labels and fraction

The same collection generates multiple ratio descriptions.

Grade 6 Math | 6.RP.A.1
Ratio as a Relationship | Lesson 1 of 2

Worked Example: Baseball and Tennis Balls

Bag: 5 baseballs, 3 tennis balls (8 total)

Ratio Notation Type
Baseballs to tennis balls 5 to 3 = 5:3 = 5/3 Part-to-part
Baseballs to total 5 to 8 = 5:8 = 5/8 Part-to-whole
Tennis balls to total 3 to 8 = 3:8 = 3/8 Part-to-whole

Also: 8:12 from the candy jar and 2:3 are both correct — neither needs to be "simplified."

Grade 6 Math | 6.RP.A.1
Ratio as a Relationship | Lesson 1 of 2

Ratio vs. Fraction — Not the Same

Same bag: 5 baseballs, 3 tennis balls, 8 total

Part-to-part ratio: 5:3 → written as 5/3

  • Reads as "5 to 3" — NOT "five-thirds"
  • Does NOT mean 5/3 of the balls are baseballs (that would be more than all the balls!)

Part-to-whole ratio: 5:8 → written as 5/8

  • Reads as "5 to 8" — but this one DOES tell us the fraction of baseballs: 5 out of 8

Fraction: 5/8 names a single number (0.625) — "five-eighths of the balls are baseballs"

⚠️ Only a part-to-whole ratio matches a fraction of the whole.

Grade 6 Math | 6.RP.A.1
Ratio as a Relationship | Lesson 1 of 2

Your Turn: Classify and Write

A fruit basket has 6 apples and 4 oranges (10 total).

Complete the table:

What you're comparing Notation Type
Apples to oranges ___ to ___ = : = / ___
Apples to total fruit ___ to ___ = : = / ___
Oranges to total fruit ___ to ___ = : = / ___

Bonus: Which of the three ratios above matches the fraction "6 out of 10"?

Grade 6 Math | 6.RP.A.1
Ratio as a Relationship | Lesson 1 of 2

Key Takeaways

✓ A ratio describes a multiplicative relationship — not a difference or a single number
✓ Ratio language: "for every," "for each," "to," "per" all signal a ratio
✓ Three notations: a to b = a:b = a/b — all mean the same thing
Part-to-part: compares two parts — Part-to-whole: compares one part to the total
✓ Only a part-to-whole ratio can be interpreted as a fraction of the whole
✓ Both 8:12 and 2:3 are valid — ratios do not have to be simplified

Grade 6 Math | 6.RP.A.1
Ratio as a Relationship | Lesson 1 of 2

Watch Out! Common Errors

⚠️ "4 more purple" is NOT a ratio — that is additive comparison. Ratios use "for every."

⚠️ Order matters. "Wings to beaks is 2:1" ≠ "beaks to wings is 2:1" — those mean different things.

⚠️ 5/3 does NOT mean 5/3 of the balls are baseballs. Only a part-to-whole ratio can be read as a fraction of the whole.

⚠️ 8:12 is NOT wrong just because it can be simplified. Unsimplified ratios are completely valid.

Grade 6 Math | 6.RP.A.1
Ratio as a Relationship | Lesson 1 of 2

Coming Up: Lesson 2 of 2

In the next lesson, you will:

  • Apply ratio language and all three notations to real-world scenarios
  • Practice the full four-step ratio process: identify → describe → notate → classify
  • Work through smoothie recipes, classroom preferences, and nature contexts

All five skills from today come together in Lesson 2.

Grade 6 Math | 6.RP.A.1