Read the Answer Unit First
The routine:
- Read the question — identify what you want per what
- Write the answer unit as a fraction: "miles per hour" → miles/hour
- Put the A-quantity in the numerator, B-quantity in the denominator
- Set up the complex fraction to match, then compute
"Gallons per minute" → gallons on top, minutes on bottom.
"Minutes per gallon" → minutes on top, gallons on bottom.
Two Directions: The Printing Press
Same ratio — same context — two different unit rates.
Worked Example: Printing Press (Both Directions)
A press uses
Pints per page (ink cost for one full page):
Pages per pint (pages from one pint of ink):
Quick Check: Choosing the Right Rate
A manager needs to order ink for a 500-page edition.
Which rate do you multiply by 500 to get pints of ink?
Think: what are the units of "500 pages × ___" that gives pints?
Like Units: When Units Cancel
A scale model: every
Scale = actual feet per model foot:
Interpretation: Every 1 model foot corresponds to 2.5 actual feet.
Like Units: The Scale Factor Diagram
- Both quantities measured in the same unit → units cancel in the result
- The result is a scale factor — a pure multiplier, no unit label
- Applies to: maps, architectural plans, similar figures
Worked Example: Area Context
A floor tile covers
Cost per square foot:
Units: dollars ÷ square feet → dollars per square foot ✓
Your Turn: Choose Your Direction
For each problem, identify the answer unit before computing.
-
A hiker covers
mile in hour. Speed in miles per hour? -
A map:
inch represents mile. Scale in inches per mile? -
Carpet:
sq yd costs . Cost per square yard?
Write the answer unit as a fraction first. Then build and compute.
Answers
1. Miles per hour:
2. Inches per mile:
3. Dollars per sq yd:
Key Takeaways
✓ One ratio → two valid unit rates (each is the reciprocal of the other)
✓ Read the answer unit first — it determines which quantity goes in the numerator
✓ Like-unit ratios → dimensionless scale factor (units cancel in the answer)
Watch out: wrong direction gives the reciprocal of the correct answer
- "Per page" → pages in the denominator; "per pint" → pints in the denominator
- If your answer seems like it should be bigger (or smaller), check your direction
Watch out: always write units in labeled answers
is incomplete; gal/min is correct- Exception: like-unit answers are dimensionless (e.g., 2.5 for a scale factor — no label)
Well Done — You've Completed 7.RP.A.1
What you can now do:
- Set up any fractional unit rate — same question, same setup, fraction ÷ fraction
- Simplify complex fractions — reciprocal, cancel, multiply, simplify
- Choose the right direction — read the answer unit, build the fraction to match
Coming up in 7.RP.A.2:
The unit rate you computed is also called the constant of proportionality
When
Click to begin the narrated lesson
Compute unit rates associated with ratios of fractions