1 / 20
Ratio Tools and Unit Rate Problems | Lesson 1 of 2

Ratio Tools and Unit Rate Problems

Lesson 1 of 2: Building and Using the Toolkit

In this lesson:

  • Build equivalent ratio tables and find missing values
  • Plot ratio pairs on the coordinate plane
  • Solve unit rate problems forward and backward
Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.RP.A.3
Ratio Tools and Unit Rate Problems | Lesson 1 of 2

What You Will Learn Today

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

  1. Build a table of equivalent ratios and find missing values
  2. Plot ratio pairs on a coordinate plane and describe the pattern
  3. Solve unit rate problems — forward and backward — across contexts
Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.RP.A.3
Ratio Tools and Unit Rate Problems | Lesson 1 of 2

Four Tools for Ratio Problem-Solving

Tool Best for
Equivalent ratio table Finding missing values, comparing
Tape diagram Seeing the scale of both quantities
Double number line Reading the unit rate directly
Coordinate plane Seeing ratio pairs as a line
Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.RP.A.3
Ratio Tools and Unit Rate Problems | Lesson 1 of 2

Applying All Four Tools to One Ratio

A lemonade recipe: 2 cups lemon juice for every 5 cups water

  • Table: each row is an equivalent ratio
  • Tape diagram: two bars that scale by the same factor
  • Double number line: two parallel lines, values aligned
  • Coordinate plane: ratio pairs form a straight line
Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.RP.A.3
Ratio Tools and Unit Rate Problems | Lesson 1 of 2

Tool 1 — Equivalent Ratio Table

Lemonade: 2 cups lemon for every 5 cups water

Ratio table for lemonade — lemon and water columns with rows (2,5),(4,10),(6,15),(8,20)

  • Multiply both values by the same factor each row
  • Unit rate: cups water per cup lemon
  • Check: every row divides to give the same unit rate
Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.RP.A.3
Ratio Tools and Unit Rate Problems | Lesson 1 of 2

Tool 2 — Tape Diagram

Lemonade: 2 cups lemon for every 5 cups water

Tape diagram with 2-segment lemon bar and 5-segment water bar side by side

  • Lemon bar: 2 equal segments; water bar: 5 equal segments
  • If each segment = 3 cups → 6 cups lemon, 15 cups water
  • Both bars scale together — the ratio stays constant
Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.RP.A.3
Ratio Tools and Unit Rate Problems | Lesson 1 of 2

Tool 3 — Double Number Line

Lemonade: 2 cups lemon for every 5 cups water

Double number line — lemon 0 to 8 on top, water 0 to 20 on bottom; corresponding values aligned; unit rate at lemon=1 shown

One cup of lemon corresponds to 2.5 cups of water — that's the unit rate, read directly from the line.

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.RP.A.3
Ratio Tools and Unit Rate Problems | Lesson 1 of 2

Tool 4 — Coordinate Plane

Plot each ratio pair: (lemon, water)

Coordinate plane with points (2,5),(4,10),(6,15),(8,20) plotted and connected; lemon on x-axis, water on y-axis; line passes through origin

  • Points: (2,5), (4,10), (6,15), (8,20)
  • They form a straight line through the origin
  • Steepness of the line = the unit rate (2.5 cups water per cup lemon)
Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.RP.A.3
Ratio Tools and Unit Rate Problems | Lesson 1 of 2

Using the Unit Rate to Find Missing Values

How much water for 7 cups of lemon?

Step 1 — divide: cups water per cup lemon

Step 2 — multiply: cups water

Check:

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.RP.A.3
Ratio Tools and Unit Rate Problems | Lesson 1 of 2

Using Tables to Compare Two Ratios

Which recipe makes stronger lemonade?

  • Recipe A: 2:5 → cups water per cup lemon
  • Recipe B: 3:7 → cups water per cup lemon

Recipe B is stronger — less water per cup of lemon

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.RP.A.3
Ratio Tools and Unit Rate Problems | Lesson 1 of 2

Quick Check — Build a Ratio Table

New ratio: 3 cups orange juice for every 8 cups water

  1. Build a ratio table with at least 4 rows
  2. Find the unit rate
  3. How much water for 9 cups of orange juice?

Pause and try before the next slide.

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.RP.A.3
Ratio Tools and Unit Rate Problems | Lesson 1 of 2

Every Unit Rate Problem Has Three Questions

Three-box diagram: Given Ratio arrow to Unit Rate arrow to Answer; forward (×) and backward (÷) labeled

  1. Find the rate: divide to get the unit rate
  2. Forward: rate × given quantity = answer
  3. Backward: given amount ÷ rate = answer
Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.RP.A.3
Ratio Tools and Unit Rate Problems | Lesson 1 of 2

Lawn-Mowing Example — All Three Questions

7 hours to mow 4 lawns

Q1 — Rate:

Q2 — Forward: lawns in 35 hours?

Q3: same rate — lawn/hr or hr/lawn

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.RP.A.3
Ratio Tools and Unit Rate Problems | Lesson 1 of 2

Unit Pricing — Compare and Calculate

Store A: 3 lb for $2.49 · Store B: 5 lb for $3.90

  • Store A: /lb
  • Store B: /lb → Better deal

For 8 pounds at Store B:

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.RP.A.3
Ratio Tools and Unit Rate Problems | Lesson 1 of 2

Worked Example — Constant Speed

A cyclist travels at 12 miles per hour.

Forward — how far in 2.5 hours?

Backward — how long to travel 42 miles?

Always check: do the units work out?

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.RP.A.3
Ratio Tools and Unit Rate Problems | Lesson 1 of 2

Unit Direction Error — Wrong vs. Right

Wrong direction (units don't work out):

Right direction (hours cancel):

Ask first: "What unit do I want in my answer?"

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.RP.A.3
Ratio Tools and Unit Rate Problems | Lesson 1 of 2

Practice — Apply the Three-Question Template

1 (unit pricing): 16-oz peanut butter $3.84; 28-oz $6.44.
Better deal? Cost for 40 oz at the better price?

2 (constant speed): Train at 75 mph.
Distance in 3.5 hr? Time for 300 miles?

Show unit rate; carry units through.

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.RP.A.3
Ratio Tools and Unit Rate Problems | Lesson 1 of 2

Practice Answers — Unit Rate Problems

1: /oz vs /oz → 28-oz jar wins
40 × $0.23 = $9.20

2: $75 \times 3.5 = $ 262.5 mi · $300 \div 75 = $ 4 hr

Units: mi/hr × hr = mi ✓ | mi ÷ mi/hr = hr ✓

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.RP.A.3
Ratio Tools and Unit Rate Problems | Lesson 1 of 2

Key Takeaways — Lesson 1

✓ Four ratio tools represent the same relationship in different ways

✓ To find a missing value in a ratio table: compute the unit rate, then multiply

✓ Plotting ratio pairs gives a straight line through the origin

✓ Unit rate problems: find the rate → use forward (×) or backward (÷)

⚠️ Ratio tables grow by multiplication, not addition — (2,5), (4,10) not (3,6)

⚠️ Check your units — the wrong direction gives a nonsense unit like hr²/lawn

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.RP.A.3
Ratio Tools and Unit Rate Problems | Lesson 1 of 2

Next Lesson — Percent and Unit Conversion

  • Percent as a special rate — "per 100"
  • Two percent problem types: find the part, find the whole
  • Unit conversion using the cancellation method

The same ratio/rate thinking you practiced today applies directly.

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.RP.A.3