Two Variables Describe a Relationship
- Every
gives a different — infinitely many solution pairs - Each pair represents a real (items, cost) combination
- The graph shows all solution pairs at once
What Points on the Graph Mean
: at the start, 500 liters remain : after 10 minutes, 300 liters remain
Every Point Has Meaning in Context
What does the point
After 15 minutes, there are 200 liters remaining in the tank.
Check:
Every point
Quick Check: Interpreting a Point
For
Explain the meaning of the point
What happens at
Answers to Interpreting the Intercept
The
Choosing Variables, Axes, and Scale
When setting up a two-variable graph:
- Independent variable (freely chosen input) →
-axis - Dependent variable (output that depends on input) →
-axis - Scale: cover the full relevant domain and range
- Labels: variable name AND units — e.g., "Time (minutes)" not just "
"
Well-Labeled Graph:
- Axes labeled with variable names and units
- Scale:
from 0 to 25; from 0 to 500 - Graph ends at
— the domain is
Worked Example: Building a Fuel Equation
Car: 12 gallons, 30 miles per gallon →
= miles driven (independent → -axis)- Domain:
-intercept: 12 (full tank); -intercept: 360 (empty)
Worked Example: Budget Equation (Standard Form)
$12 budget: apples $1.50, oranges $2.00 →
-intercept: — spend all on apples -intercept: — spend all on oranges- Only non-negative integers make sense in context
Guided Practice: Taxi Cost Equation
Context: A taxi charges $3.50 base fee plus $1.75 per mile.
Set up the graph:
- Which variable is independent? Which is dependent?
- What are appropriate labels and scale for 0 to 20 miles?
- What does the point
mean in context?
Practice Problems: Graphing Linear Equations
Graph each with labeled axes and 3+ labeled points:
-
( = hours, = products remaining) -
(spending equation)
Find both intercepts and explain their meaning
Answers to Linear Graphing Practice Problems
-intercept: ; -intercept:- Slope
: as increases, decreases
Poor vs. Good Graph Comparison
- Left: unlabeled axes, arbitrary scale — uninterpretable
- Right: labeled with units, domain-appropriate scale — clear and complete
Quick Check: Axis Assignment Error
A student graphs
-axis: "Cost ( )" -axis: "Number of items ( )"
What error did the student make? Why does it matter?
Overview of Non-Linear Two-Variable Equations
Identify the type before graphing:
| Type | Shape | Context clue |
|---|---|---|
| Linear | Line | Constant rate |
| Quadratic | Parabola | Area, height |
| Exponential | J-curve | Doubling, halving |
Worked Example: Modeling Projectile Height
Ball thrown at 48 ft/s:
- Parabola opening downward
-intercepts: (launch), (landing)- Vertex at
: maximum height = 36 ft
Worked Example: Exponential Population Growth
Colony: 500 bacteria, doubles hourly →
- J-shaped curve (exponential growth)
: ; :- Use large
-axis scale — values grow quickly
Worked Example: Area and Perimeter Quadratic
Rectangle, perimeter 20 cm, side
- Domain:
- Maximum area at
(square): cm²
Guided Practice: Setting Up a Quadratic Equation
- What domain makes sense?
- What does the vertex represent?
- Where does
?
Practice Problems: Modeling Non-Linear Equations
For each situation, set up the two-variable equation, identify the type, and sketch the general shape:
-
A ball falls from rest:
( in meters, in seconds) -
An investment triples every decade:
( in decades, in dollars)
Answers to Non-Linear Practice Problems
Key Takeaways from This Lesson
✓ Two-variable equations model relationships, not single values
✓ Independent →
✓ Label axes with units; choose appropriate scale
✓ Every graph point has a real-world meaning
Don't graph beyond the valid domain
What Comes Next: Systems of Equations
HSA.REI.D.10: Every graph point is precisely a solution — formalizing today's work.
HSA.CED.A.3 & REI.C.6: Inequalities and systems — multiple constraints combined.
Today's graphs are the tools for all upcoming lessons.
Click to begin the narrated lesson
Create equations in two or more variables