Worked Example: Park Rectangle Method 1
Scale: 1 cm:10 m. Drawing: 4 cm × 6 cm.
Method 1 — Convert sides, then area:
Worked Example: Park Rectangle Method 2
Same problem — verified using k²:
k (in matching units): 1 cm = 1000 cm → k = 1000
Use Method 1 as default; Method 2 verifies.
Wrong vs. Right: The Area Error
| Calculation | Result | |
|---|---|---|
| 24 cm² × 10 = 240 m² | Off by ×10 | |
| ✓ Right | 40 m × 60 m = 2,400 m² | Correct |
k applied once instead of k².
Check-In: Find the Actual Area
Scale: 1 cm:5 m. Drawing: 3 cm × 2 cm.
A) 30 m² B) 150 m² C) 300 m² D) 60 m²
Use Method 1 before choosing.
Worked Example: Area of a Triangular Plot
Scale: 1 cm:8 m. Triangle: base 5 cm, height 3 cm.
Convert both dimensions:
Compute area:
Your Turn: Solve Three Area Problems
Convert dimensions first. Show each step.
- Scale 1 cm:6 m; rectangle 5 cm × 3 cm → area?
- Scale 1 cm:4 m; triangle base 4 cm, height 2.5 cm → area?
- Scale 2 cm:10 m; rectangle 6 cm × 4 cm → area?
Answers: Check Your Three Area Solutions
- Scale 1 cm:6 m; 5×3 cm → actual 30×18 m → area = 540 m²
- Scale 1 cm:4 m; base 4 cm, height 2.5 cm → actual 16×10 m → area = 80 m²
- Scale 2 cm:10 m → 1 cm:5 m; 6×4 cm → actual 30×20 m → area = 600 m²
Transition: From Area to Reproduction
We can now compute actual area from any scale drawing.
New challenge: Take an existing drawing and redraw it at a different scale.
- Step 1 — Decode: use the original scale → find actual dimensions
- Step 2 — Encode: use the new scale → find new drawing dimensions
How the Two-Step Reproduction Works
- Step 1: Decode — multiply by old scale factor
- Step 2: Encode — divide by new scale factor
Worked Example: Reproduce the Garden Larger
Original: 6 cm × 4 cm at 1 cm:5 m. Reproduce at 1 cm:2 m.
Decode:
Encode:
New drawing (15×10 cm) is larger ✓
Worked Example: Same Garden Made Smaller
Same actual garden (30 m × 20 m). Reproduce at 1 cm:10 m.
Encode:
New drawing (3×2 cm) is smaller ✓
1 cm:2 m → largest; 1 cm:5 m → medium; 1 cm:10 m → smallest
Scale Comparison Table for Same Garden
| Scale | 1 cm = | Drawing |
|---|---|---|
| 1 cm:2 m | 2 m | 15×10 cm — largest |
| 1 cm:5 m | 5 m | 6×4 cm — medium |
| 1 cm:10 m | 10 m | 3×2 cm — smallest |
Misconception: Wrong Scale Used in Step 2
Error: Decodes correctly (×5 → 30 m), then encodes with OLD scale again (×5 → 150 cm).
Fix: Label each step explicitly:
- Step 1 (DECODE): ×old scale
- Step 2 (ENCODE): ÷new scale
Actual → drawing always divides.
Guided Practice: Reproduce the Hallway
Original: 3 cm × 0.5 cm at 1 cm:4 m. Reproduce at 1 cm:2 m.
Step 1 (given):
Your turn — Step 2: Encode at 1 cm:2 m.
Find new dimensions. Larger or smaller than original?
Your Turn: Two Reproduction Problems
Label Step 1 (decode) and Step 2 (encode).
- Drawing 4 cm × 2 cm at 1 cm:3 m → reproduce at 1 cm:6 m
- Drawing 5 cm × 5 cm at 1 cm:8 m → reproduce at 1 cm:2 m
Predict larger or smaller before computing.
Answers: Check Your Reproduction Work
Problem 1: Actual 12 m × 6 m (×3). New drawing at 1 cm:6 m = 2 cm × 1 cm (smaller ✓)
Problem 2: Actual 40 m × 40 m (×8). New drawing at 1 cm:2 m = 20 cm × 20 cm (larger ✓)
Key Takeaways: Areas and Reproduction
✓ Length scales by k — area scales by k²
✓ Area: convert dimensions first, then compute
✓ Reproduction: decode (×old scale) → encode (÷new scale)
Never multiply drawing area by k
Convert every dimension (base AND height)
Step 2: use the new scale
Coming Up: Scale Drawings and Geometry
This standard connects forward to:
- 7.G.A.2: Constructing triangles and polygons at specified scales
- 7.G.B.6: Real-world area and volume problems
- 8.G.A: Similar figures and dilations
- High school: AA, SAS, SSS similarity theorems
Proportion is the backbone of all similarity work ahead.