Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

   Ratios and Proportion Write each fraction in simplest form.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "   Ratios and Proportion Write each fraction in simplest form."— Presentation transcript:

1    Ratios and Proportion Write each fraction in simplest form.
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-1 (For help, go to Skills Handbook pages 724 and 727.) Write each fraction in simplest form. Simplify each product. 49 84 24 42 135 180 35 25 40 14 99 144 96 88 21 81 108 56 4-1

2       Ratios and Proportion 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Solutions = = = =
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-1 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Solutions 49 7 • 7 7 84 7 • 12 12 = = 24 6 • 4 4 42 6 • 7 7 = = • 3 3 • 4 4 = = • 7 5 • 8 5 • 7 • 5 • 8 8 • 5 7 • 2 5 • 5 • 7 • 2 2 = = = = 4 • • • 11 • 8 • • 12 8 • • 12 • 8 • = = = = • • 3 • 3 • 4 3 • 7 • • 3 • 3 • • 8 3 • 7 • = 4 = = = 4 4-1

3 Ratios and Proportion ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-1 Another brand of apple juice costs $1.56 for 48 oz. Find the unit rate. cost $1.56 ounces 48 oz = $.0325/oz The unit rate is 3.25¢/oz. 4-1

4 Use appropriate conversion factors.
Ratios and Proportion ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-1 The fastest recorded speed for an eastern gray kangaroo is 40 mi per hour. What is the kangaroo’s speed in feet per second? 40 mi 1 h 5280 ft 1 mi 60 min 1 min 60 s Use appropriate conversion factors. 40 mi 1 h 5280 ft 1 mi 60 min 1 min 60 s Divide the common units. = 58.6 ft/s Simplify. The kangaroo’s speed is about 58.7 ft/s. 4-1

5 Ratios and Proportion Solve = . • 12 =
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-1 Solve = . y 3 3 4 y 3 • 12 = 4 Multiply each side by the least common multiple of 3 and 4, which is 12. • 12 4y = 9 Simplify. 4y 4 = 9 Divide each side by 4. y = 2.25 Simplify. 4-1

6 Use cross products to solve the proportion = – .
Ratios and Proportion ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-1 w 4.5 6 5 Use cross products to solve the proportion = – . w 4.5 = – 6 5 w(5) = (4.5)(–6) Write cross products. 5w = –27 Simplify. 5w 5 = –27 Divide each side by 5. w = –5.4 Simplify. 4-1

7 Define: Let t = time needed to ride 295 km.
Ratios and Proportion ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-1 In 2000, Lance Armstrong completed the 3630-km Tour de France course in 92.5 hours. Traveling at his average speed, how long would it take Lance Armstrong to ride 295 km? Define: Let t = time needed to ride 295 km. Relate: Tour de France average speed Write: equals = 295-km trip 3630 92.5 295 t kilometers hours 3630 92.5 = 295 t 3630t = 92.5(295) Write cross products. t = Divide each side by 3630. 92.5(295) 3630 t Simplify. Round to the nearest tenth. Traveling at his average speed, it would take Lance approximately 7.5 hours to cycle 295 km. 4-1

8 Use the Distributive Property.
Ratios and Proportion ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-1 z + 3 4 z – 4 6 Solve the proportion = . z + 3 4 z – 4 6 = (z + 3)(6) = 4(z – 4) Write cross products. 6z + 18 = 4z – 16 Use the Distributive Property. 2z + 18 = –16 Subtract 4z from each side. 2z = –34 Subtract 18 from each side. Divide each side by 2. = 2z 2 –34 z = –17 Simplify. 4-1

9 Ratios and Proportion pages 185–188 Exercises 1. $9.50/h 2. $.40/lb
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-1 pages 185–188  Exercises 1. $9.50/h 2. $.40/lb cars/week cal/h 5. $.24/oz 6. $.09/oz 7. A 8. A 9. B 10. A 13. 10,800 16. 5 19. 6 20. –20 22. 9 23. –16.5 24. 6 25. –5.25 26. 90 27. 28 km 33. 8 34. 7 35. –3 2 3 11 12 1 3 1 2 4-1

10 65. Answers may vary. Sample: Multiply the numerator of each side by
Ratios and Proportion ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-1 36. 8 mi/h mi/h mi/h 47. 1 mi/h 48. 1 mi/h 49. about 0.28 mi/h min mm ft/s 53. 3 55. –16 57. 45 59. –17 60. 59 61. –8.4 62. about 646 students 63. about 750 students 64. about 1000 students 65. Answers may vary. Sample: Multiply the numerator of each side by the denominator of the other side. Set the products equal to each other and solve the equation. = , (7)(15) = 5x, x = 21 66. $.05/mi 67. 4 people/mi2, 2485 people/mi2, 78 people/mi2 7 5 x 15 4-1

11 OR equivalent explanation [1] incorrect proportion solved correctly
Ratios and Proportion ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-1 68. Check students’ work. 69. a. 7, 14 b. 21 c. 21 d. x = 7a 70. Bonnie: $56.00, Tim: $32.00 V 72. 9 73. –7.5 74. 9 75. –32 76. a min/mi b min/mi 77. D 78. G 79. C 80. G 81. [2] = ; x = 53 rings, which is 53 years OR equivalent explanation [1] incorrect proportion solved correctly OR correct proportion solved incorrectly 82. 83. 84. 12 in. 32 rings 20 in. x rings 1 3 4-1

12 Ratios and Proportion 97. –5 85. 98. –5.5 86. 99. –90 87. no solution
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-1 85. 86. 87. no solution 88. t = height (in.), t 72 89. s = students, s 90. m = miles, m 91. w = weight (lb), w > 20 92. 93. 94. 95. 6 97. –5 98. –5.5 99. –90 100. –6 1 2 < > < 4-1

13 Ratios and Proportion Solve.
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-1 Solve. 1. Find the unit rate of a 12-oz bottle of orange juice that sells for $1.29. 2. If you are driving 65 mi/h, how many feet per second are you driving? Solve each proportion. 10.75¢/oz. about 95.3 ft/s c 6 12 15 21 12 7 y = 4.8 = 4 3 + x 7 4 8 1 2 2 + x x – 4 25 35 = = –17 4-1

14 Proportions and Similar Figures
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-2 (For help, go to Skills Handbook and Lesson 4-1.) Simplify Solve each proportion. 36 42 81 108 26 52 x 12 7 30 y 12 8 45 w 15 12 27 = = = 9 a 81 10 25 75 z 30 n 9 n + 1 24 = = = 4-2

15 Proportions and Similar Figures
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-2 Solutions 2. 3. 4. 6. 8. 36 42 6 • 6 6 6 • 7 7 y 12 8 45 9 a 81 10 n 9 n + 1 24 = = = = = 45y = 12(8) 81a = 9(10) 24n = 9(n + 1) 81 108 27 • 3 3 27 • 4 4 = = 45y = 96 81a = 90 24n = 9n + 9 26 52 26 • 1 1 26 • 2 2 y = 96 45 a = 90 81 = = 15n = 9 9 15 2 15 1 9 n = x 12 7 30 = y = 2 a = 1 3 5 n = 30x = 12(7) w 15 12 27 25 75 z 30 = = 30x = 84 27w = 15(12) 75z = 25(30) x = 84 30 27w = 180 75z = 750 w = 180 27 z = 750 75 x = 2 4 5 2 3 w = 6 z = 10 4-2

16 Proportions and Similar Figures
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-2 In the figure below, ABC ~ DEF. Find AB. Write: = Relate: = EF BC DE AB Define: Let x = AB. 6 9 8 x Write a proportion comparing the lengths of the corresponding sides. Substitute 6 for EF, 9 for BC, 8 for DE, and x for AB. 6x = 9(8) Write cross products. = Divide each side by 6. 6x 6 72 x = 12 Simplify. AB is 12 mm. 4-2

17 Proportions and Similar Figures
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-2 A flagpole casts a shadow 102 feet long. A 6 ft tall man casts a shadow 17 feet long. How tall is the flagpole? = 102 17 x 6 Write a proportion. 17x = 102 • 6 Write cross products. 17x = 612 Simplify. Divide each side by 17. = 17x 17 612 x = 36 Simplify. The flagpole is 36 ft tall. 4-2

18 Proportions and Similar Figures
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-2 The scale of a map is 1 inch : 10 miles. The map distance from Valkaria to Gifford is 2.25 inches. Approximately how far is the actual distance? = map actual 1 10 2.25 x Write a proportion. 1 • x = 10 • 2.25 Write cross products. x = 22.5 Simplify. The actual distance from Valkaria to Gifford is approximately 22.5 mi. 4-2

19 Proportions and Similar Figures
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-2 in. mi mi mi mi 15. a. Lincoln to San Paulo = 16 mi Lincoln to Duncanville = 26 mi San Paulo to Duncanville = 18 mi b. 26 mi roundtrip 16. 1 cm : 8 km 17. 4 in. by 6 in. in. by 4 in. 19. 2 in. by 3 in. pages 192–195  Exercises 1. AB PQ, BC QR, CA RP, A P, B Q, C R 2. ED JH, DF HK, FE KJ, D H, E J, F K ft cm 5. 80 in. 6. 40 m cm ft ft 2 3 4-2

20 Proportions and Similar Figures
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-2 in. by 4.8 in. in. ft by 27 ft 23. a. Answers may vary. Sample: GK and RQ are not corresponding sides. b = 24. 1 in. : 12 ft 25. 9 ft by 12 ft 26. 3 ft ft2 28. yes; because it is 6 ft wide and 9 ft long cm long by 20 cm wide 30. a. 6 m b. 6 m, 18 m c. Yes, the ratio of the sides is equal to the ratio of perimeters in similar figures. d. 2 m2, 18 m2 e. Answers may vary. Sample: The area ratio is the square of the side ratio. 31. Answers may vary. Sample: doll house to regular house, model car to real car 32. a. Yes; the sides are proportional. b. The volume ratio is the cube c. 27 : 1 33. a = 8, b = 6, c = 10 GH PQ HL RQ 4-2

21 Proportions and Similar Figures
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-2 34. about 1 in. : 30.5 mi ,400 km 36. a. = b. 3.2 c in. d in.2 37. B 38. I 39. [2] smaller area: 6 • 5 = 30; 30 ft2; larger area: 10 • 12 = 120; 120 ft2;       = 0.5(120) = 30x      60 = 30x 2 = x Two gallons of paint should cover a 10 ft  20 ft wall. [1] incorrect calculation for one area and proportion solved correctly OR correct area calculations but proportion set up incorrectly 0.5 30 x 120 8 8 + x 5 7 4-2

22 Proportions and Similar Figures
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-2 77.5 16 55 12 40. [4] a.      = 77.5(12) = 16(55)      930 = 880 Since the cross products are not equal, the proportion is not true. So the postcard is not similar to the painting. b = OR = The postcard should be 12 cm  16.9 cm OR 11.4 cm  16 cm. / [3] appropriate methods, but with one computational error OR found only one possible postcard size [2] incorrect proportions solved correctly [1] correct answer with no work shown 42. 16 43. –22 44. 40 45. b < –4 46. x ≥ 7 47. m < –4 48. h > – / 2 3 6 7 77.5 x 55 12 77.5 16 55 y 3 2 4-2

23 Proportions and Similar Figures
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-2 1. In the figure below, ABC ~ DEF. Find DF. 2. A boy who is 5.5 feet tall casts a shadow that is 8.25 feet long. The tree next to him casts a shadow that is 18 feet long. How tall is the tree? 3. The scale on a map is 1 in.: 20 mi. What is the actual distance between two towns that are 3.5 inches apart on the map? About 19.7 cm 12 ft 70 mi 4-2

24 Proportions and Percent Equations
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-3 (For help, go to skills handbook pages 727 and 728.) Find each product. • • Write each fraction as a decimal and as a percent. 23 60 20 46 17 135 5 34 7 10 23 100 2 5 13 20 35 40 7 16 4 25 170 200 4-3

25 Proportions and Percent Equations
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-3 Solutions • 9 = 5.4 • 6.8 = 25.84 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 23 60 20 46 23 • 20 20 • 3 • 23 • 2 1 3 • 2 1 6 = = = 17 135 5 34 17 • 5 5 • 27 • 17 • 2 1 27 • 2 1 54 = = = 7 10 = 7 ÷ 10 = 0.7; 0.7(100%) = 70% 23 100 = 23 ÷ 10 = 0.23; 0.23(100%) = 23% 2 5 = 2 ÷ 5 = 0.4; 0.4(100%) = 40% 4-3

26 Proportions and Percent Equations
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-3 Solutions (continued) 13 20 = 13 ÷ 20 =0.65; 0.65(100%) = 65% 35 40 = 35 ÷ 40 = 0.875; 0.875(100%) = 87.5% 7 16 = 7 ÷ 16 = ; (100%) = 43.75% 4 25 = 4 ÷ 25 = 0.16; 0.16(100%) = 16% 170 200 = 170 ÷ 200 = 0.85; 0.85(100%) = 85% 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 4-3

27 Proportions and Percent Equations
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-3 What percent of 90 is 27? percent = n 100 27 90 part whole 90n = 2700 Find the cross products. n = 30 Divide each side by 90. 30% of 90 is 27. 4-3

28 Proportions and Percent Equations
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-3 Find 25% of 480. = 25 100 n 480 part whole 12,000 = 100n Find the cross products. 120 = n Divide each side by 100. 25% of 480 is 120. 4-3

29 Proportions and Percent Equations
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-3 Water covers about 361,736,000 km2, or about 70.8% of the earth’s surface area. Approximately what is the total surface area of the earth? 361,736,000 t Relate: 70.8% of the total surface area is 361,736,000 km2. Define: Let t the total surface area. Write: =  70.8 100 part whole 70.8t = 361,736,000,000  Find cross products. t = 510,926,553.7 Divide each side by 70.8. The total surface area of the earth is approximately 510,926,554 km2. 4-3

30 Proportions and Percent Equations
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-3 What percent of 140 is 84? Relate: What percent of 140 is 84? Define: Let p = the decimal form of the percent. Write: p • 140 = 84 140p = 84 p = 0.6 Divide each side by 140. p = 60% Write the decimal as a percent. 60% of 140 is 84. 4-3

31 Proportions and Percent Equations
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-3 What percent of 60 is 144? Relate: What percent of 60 is 114? Define: Let n = the decimal form of the percent. Write: n • 60 = 114 60n = 114 n = 1.90 Divide each side by 60. n = 190% Write the decimal as a percent. 190% of 60 is 114. 4-3

32 Proportions and Percent Equations
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-3 a. Estimate the number that is 19% of 323. = 20%. So is a good approximation of 19%. 19% 1 5 325 and 5 are compatible numbers. • 325 = 65 1 5 65 is approximately 19% of 323. b. What is 73% of 125? Use fractions to estimate the answer. = 75%. So is a good approximation of 73%. 73% 3 4 • 124 = 93 3 4 124 and 4 are compatible numbers. 93 is approximately 73% of 125. 4-3

33 Proportions and Percent Equations
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-3 A candidate for mayor sent out surveys to 8056 people in his city. After two weeks, about 18% of the surveys were returned. How many surveys were returned? Relate: What is 18% of 8056? Define: Let n = the unknown number. Write: n = 0.18 • 8056 n = 0.18 • 8056 n = Simplify. About 1450 surveys were returned. 4-3

34 Proportions and Percent Equations
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-3 pages 200–202  Exercises 1. 50% 2. 25% % 4. 20% 5. 25% 6. 20% 7. 8 8. 16 9. 21 10. 28 11. 10 12. 20 13. = , 50 14. = , 25 15. = , 160 16. = , 240 17. = , 70 18. = , 140 h = 0.25x; 200 = 0.50x; 50 = n • 150; 64% 40 100 80 15 20 60 30 x 24 48 42 = n • 60; 75% 24. x = 0.05(300); 15 25. x = 0.05(200); 10 26. 21 % 28. 4 % % 34. 22 1 3 4-3

35 Proportions and Percent Equations
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-3 36. 68 37. 32 38. about 960 students 39–40.  Proportions or equations may vary. Samples are given. = , 4 = , 400% 41. x = 0.002(900), 1.8 x = 1.8, 90 x = 988, 98.8% (84) = x, 117.6 75 100 3 x 300 45. 62; 50% is 61 and 51.3% > 50%. 46. 20; 25% is 21 and 23.9% < 25%. 47. 73; 10% is 74 and 9.79% < 10%. ; 75% is 180 and 76.02% > 75%. 49. $297.00 50. $32.70 51. $ 52. Answers may vary. Sample: $1.20; take 10% and 5% of $8 and add them. 53. a. $74.25 b. 3.75% c. 6 yr 54. $61.20 55. $ 56. 7% 57. 2 yr 4-3

36 Proportions and Percent Equations
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-3 58. Answers may vary. Sample: 33%; I sleep 8 h a day, and there are 24 h in a day, so = , x = 59. a. b. 200 c. 400% 60. Yes; 16.99(1.15)(0.66) < 13.99(1.06), 12.90 < 64. 35 x 100 8 24 1 3 50 66. 20 mi mi mi mi 71. b < –4;   72. x 7;   73. h > –21;   74. p < – ;   1 3 2 3 > 1 3 4-3

37 Proportions and Percent Equations
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-3 1. What is 35% of 160? 2. What percent of 450 is 36? 3. 32 is 80% of what number? 4. What is 0.03% of 260,000? 5. What percent of 50 is 75? 6. Estimate 62% of 83? 56 8% 40 78 150% 51 4-3

38 Write an equation for each problem and solve.
Percent of Change ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-4 (For help, go to Lesson 4-3.) Write an equation for each problem and solve. 1. What is 20% of 20? 2. 8 is what percent of 20? 3. 18 is 90% of what number? is 90% of what number? Estimate each answer. % of % of 48 4-4

39 Percent of Change Solutions 1. What is 20% of 20? n = 0.2(20) n = 4
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-4 Solutions 1. What is 20% of 20? n = 0.2(20) n = 4 2. 8 is what percent of 20? 8 = n • 20 n = = 8 ÷ 20 = 0.4 = 40% 3. 18 is 90% of what number? 18 = 0.9n n = = 18 ÷ 0.9 = 20 is 90% of what number? 27 = 0.9n n = = 27 ÷ 0.9 = 30 % of of 24 = • 24 = 16 6. 65% of = • 48 = 32 27 0.9 2 3 2 3 8 20 2 3 2 3 2 3 18 0.9 4-4

40 Subtract to find the amount of change. Substitute the original amount.
Percent of Change ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-4 The price of a skirt decreased from $32.95 to $ Find the percent of decrease. percent of decrease = amount of change original amount 32.95 – 28.95 32.95 = Subtract to find the amount of change. Substitute the original amount. 4 32.95 = Simplify the numerator. 0.12 or 12% Write as a decimal and then as a percent. The price of the skirt decreased by about 12%. 4-4

41 Simplify the numerator.
Percent of Change ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-4 Between 1940 and 1980, the federal budget increased from $9.5 billion to $725.3 billion. What was the percent of increase in the federal budget? percent of increase = amount of change original amount = 725.3 – 9.5 9.5 Substitute. = 715.8 9.5 Simplify the numerator. = or 7535% Write as a decimal and then as a percent. The federal budget increased nearly 7535%. 4-4

42 Percent of Change ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-4 You read the bathroom scale as 122 lb. What is your greatest possible error? The scale is read to the nearest 1 lb, so the greatest possible error is one half of 1 lb, or 0.5 lb. 4-4

43 The length could be as little as 155.5 in. or as great as 156.5 in.
Percent of Change ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-4 When a garden plot was measured, the dimensions were 156 in.  84 in. Use the greatest possible error to find the minimum and maximum possible areas. Both measurements were made to the nearest whole inch, so the greatest possible error is 0.5 in. The length could be as little as in. or as great as in. The width could be as little as 83.5 in. or as great as 84.5 in. Find the minimum and maximum areas. Minimum Area Maximum Area 155.5 in.  83.5 in. = 12, in.2 156.5 in.  84.5 in. = 13, in.2 The minimum area is 12, in.2, and the maximum area is 13, in.2. 4-4

44 greatest possible error
Percent of Change ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-4 Suppose you measure a library book and record its width as 17.6 cm. Find the percent of error in your measurement. Since the measurement is to the nearest 0.1 cm, the greatest possible error is 0.05 cm. percent error = greatest possible error measurement Use the percent error formula. = 0.05 17.6 Substitute. Divide. = 0.3% Round and write as a percent. The percent error is about 0.3%. 4-4

45 Possible Error: maximum – measured measured – minimum
Percent of Change ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-4 A small jewelry box measures 7.4 cm by 12.2 cm by 4.2 cm. Find the percent error in calculating its volume. The measurements are to the nearest 0.1 cm. The greatest possible error is 0.05 cm. as measured maximum value minimum value V = • w • h = 7.4 • 12.2 • 4.2 = cm3 = 7.45 • • 4.25 = = 7.35 • • 4.15 = Possible Error: maximum – measured measured – minimum – = – = 8.57 4-4

46 greatest possible error
Percent of Change ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-4 (continued) Use the difference that shows the greatest possible error to find the percent error. percent error = greatest possible error measurement = 379.18 Use the percent error formula. Substitute. = = 2% Write as a decimal. Round and write as a percent. = 8.69 379.18 Simplify the numerator. The percent error is about 2%. 4-4

47 Percent of Change pages 207–209 Exercises 12. 14.4%; increase
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-4 pages 207–209  Exercises 1. 50%; increase %; decrease 3. 25%; increase 4. 20%; decrease %; increase 6. 25%; decrease 7. 25%; increase 8. 20%; increase %; increase %; increase %; decrease %; increase 13. 39% 14. 60% ft cm g in. cm2, cm2 mi2, mi2 in.2, in.2 km2, km2 in.2, in.2 km2; km2 25. 25% 26. 25% % % 29. a. 48 cm3 b cm3 c cm3 d cm3 e. 55% 30. 23%; decrease 31. 22%; decrease 1 3 1 3 4-4

48 44. Answers may vary. Sample: Joan bought shoes for $10.
Percent of Change ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-4 %; increase %; increase 34. 4%; increase 35. 3%; decrease 36. 56%; decrease 37. 9%; decrease 38. 17%; increase 39. 2% 40. 19% 41. 1 mm 42. no; 16% increase but a 14% decrease 43. no; increases to $70.40 but decreases to $63.36 44. Answers may vary. Sample: Joan bought shoes for $10. Sarah bought the same shoes 3 days later for $7. What was the percent change? 30% decrease cm2, 25.5 cm2 mi2, 59.6 mi2 in.2, 54.3 in.2 48. a. 100% b. 100% c. 50% d. 50% 49. 11% 50. 34% 51. Answers may vary. Sample: Use the greatest possible error to calculate the maximum, minimum, and measured areas. Find the amounts by which the maximum and minimum differ from the measured area. Divide the greater difference by the measured area. 4-4

49 52. Jorge found the change of $5 but divided by the final price
Percent of Change ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-4 52. Jorge found the change of $5 but divided by the final price instead of the original price. 53. a. 9%, 3% b. Answers may vary. Sample: The larger a measure, the smaller is the percent error. 54. Yes; > 3 (48.7) = 146.1, and %. 55. a. 21% b. 21% c. 21%; answers may vary. Sample: 1.1a • 1.1a = 1.21a2, which is 21% greater than a • a = a2. Relationship between % increase of side and area of the square doesn’t depend on the side length. 56. C 57. I 58. A 59. [2] perimeter of softball diamond: 4(60) = 240, perimeter 240 ft, side of baseball diamond: 1.5(60) = 90, side 90 ft, perimeter of baseball diamond: 4(90) = 360, perimeter 360 ft, % of increase = = 50%; area of softball diamond: 60(60) = 3600, area 3600 ft2, area of baseball diamond: 90(90) = 8100, area 8100 ft2, percent of increase = = 125% OR computation that gives same results 148.3 – 48.7 48.7 360 – 240 240 8100 – 3600 3600 4-4

50 [1] appropriate methods, but with one
Percent of Change ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-4 67. q –17 68. x –1 [1] appropriate methods, but with one computational error OR finds only one % of increase 60–65. Equations may vary. = , 7% = , 87% = , 179.5 63. = , 300% = , 1.7 = , 37.2 66. n < > > x 100 5 67 x 100 13 15 44 100 79 x x 100 96 32 0.2 100 x 834 266 100 x 14 1 15 4-4

51 Find the greatest possible error. 3. 13.2 m 4. 34.62 g
Percent of Change ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-4 Find each percent of change. Describe the percent of change as an increase or decrease. 1. $6 to $ cm to 12 cm Find the greatest possible error. m g 5. Find the percent error for the measurement 6 cm. 6. Find the minimum and maximum possible areas for a rectangle measured as 3 m x 7 m. 50% increase 20% decrease 0.05 m 0.005 g about 8.3% min: m2; max: m2 4-4

52 Applying Ratios to Probability
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-5 (For help, go to Skills Handbook page 728.) Rewrite each decimal or fraction as a percent. 45 200 9 50 4-5

53 Applying Ratios to Probability
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-5 Solutions = = 32% = = 9% 3. = = = 22.5% 4. = = = 18% 32 100 9 100 45 200 2 • 22.5 2 • 100 22.5 100 9 50 9 • 2 50 • 2 18 100 4-5

54 Applying Ratios to Probability
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-5 A bowl contains 12 slips of paper, each with a different name of a month on it. Find the theoretical probability that a slip selected at random from the bowl has the name of a month that ends with “ber.” P(event) = number of favorable outcomes number of possible outcomes = 4 12 There are 4 months out of 12 that end with “ber”: September, October, November, and December = 1 3 Simplify. The probability of picking a month that ends with “ber” is . 1 3 4-5

55 Applying Ratios to Probability
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-5 For a number cube, find the probability of not rolling a number divisible by 3. P(÷ 3) = number of favorable outcomes number of possible outcomes = 2 6 1 3 P(not ÷ 3) = 1 – P(÷ 3) Use the complement formula. = 1 – = Simplify. 1 3 2 The probability of not rolling a number divisible by 3 is . 2 3 4-5

56 Applying Ratios to Probability
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-5 Quality control inspected 500 belts at random. They found no defects in 485 belts. What is the probability that a belt selected at random will pass quality control? P(no defects) = number of times an event occurs number of times the experiment is done = Substitute. 485 500 = 0.97 = 97% Simplify. Write as a percent. The probability that a belt has no defects is 97%. 4-5

57 Applying Ratios to Probability
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-5 If the belt manufacturer from Additional Example 3 has 6258 belts, predict how many belts are likely to have no defects. number with no defects = P(no defects) • number of belts = 0.97 • 6258 Substitute. Use 0.97 for 97%. = Simplify. Approximately 6070 belts are likely to have no defects. 4-5

58 Applying Ratios to Probability
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-5 pages 214–217  Exercises 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 0 7. 8. 1 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 1 14. 80% 15. 24% 16. 43% 17. 15% 18. 85% 19. 39% 20. 67% 21. a. about 40% b. about 200 oak trees 5 6 22. a. 40% b. about 23 families 23. 24. 0 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 0 31. 1 2 1 2 1 6 1 3 1 6 1 3 1 2 2 3 5 6 1 2 1 3 8 9 1 450 1 3 1 30 5 6 4-5

59 Applying Ratios to Probability
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-5 32. 33. 1% % 35. a. Answers may vary. Sample: 20 students, 12 girls and 8 boys: 5% b. 60% c. Answers may vary. Sample: Subtract P (picking a boy) from 1. 36. a. 15%    b. 15% 37. a.       b.       c.  4 9 38. Answers may vary. Sample: For theoretical probability, all possible outcomes are equally likely to happen, but experimental probability is based on observed outcomes. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 3 16 3 8 7 16 5 8 1 3 3 4 2 5 3 20 5 3 4-5

60 Applying Ratios to Probability
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-5 45. Answers may vary. Sample: You can add the numerator and denominator and make the sum the denominator, keeping the numerator the same. 46. 47. 48. 49. a. Check students’ work. b. 1 18 1 9 1 9 1 36 c. , , , d. no e. Answers may vary. Sample: Yes; the more you roll, the closer you get to the theoretical probability. 50. A 51. G 52. D 1 4 3 10 3 10 4-5

61 Applying Ratios to Probability
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-5 53. [4] a. theoretical P(red) = OR 20% b. experimental P(red) = OR about 19.6% c. For the red beads, the manufacturer’s claim seems to be true. However, the experimental probabilities of the other colors are not as close to 20%, so Rasheeda’s experiment does not support the manufacturer’s claim. [3] one computational error with complete explanation OR correct computation with weak explanation [2] correct computation but no conclusion [1] error(s) in computation and no conclusion 54. [2] P(defective stapler) = %; production should be stopped because 5.1% > 4%. [1] correct calculation with no conclusion OR incorrect calculation but correct reasoning based on incorrect calculation 1 5 55 280 18 350 4-5

62 Applying Ratios to Probability
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-5 55. 25%; increase 56. 50%; increase 57. 40%; increase 58. 50%; decrease 59. 25%; decrease %; decrease 61. –3 ≤ t ≤ 4;   62. 5 < b < 7;   63. h < 2 or h > 5;   64. –2 ≤ w < 1;   65. x < 2 or x ≥ 4;   66. 1 ≤ k ≤ 3;   , 5, 5 , 11, 35  7 9 4 1 9 6 5 7 1  4 6 2 3 7 4 7 6 8 7 9 4-5

63 Applying Ratios to Probability
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-5 Find each probability for the roll of a number cube. 1. P(4) 2. P(not 4) 3. P(odd) 4. You harvest 50 cherry tomatoes from your garden. You randomly inspect 15 tomatoes and find that 2 have bad spots on them. a. What is the experimental probability that a tomato has a bad spot? b. Predict how many of the tomatoes you picked will have bad spots. 1 6 5 6 1 2 about 13% about 7 tomatoes 4-5

64 Probability of Compound Events
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-6 (For help, go to Lessons 4-5.) Find each probability for one roll of a number cube. 1. P(multiple of 3) 2. P(greater than 4) 3. P(greater than 5) 4. P(greater than 6) Simplify. 2 14 7 6 15 24 12 30 6 55 44 3 4-6

65 Probability of Compound Events
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-6 Solutions 1. P(multiple of 3) = P(3 or 6) = = 2. P(greater than 4) = P(5 or 6) = = 3. P(greater than 5) = P(6) = 4. P(greater than 6) = 0 5. 6. 7. 2 6 1 3 2 6 1 3 1 6 2 14 7 6 2 • 7 2 • 7 • 6 1 6 = = 15 24 12 30 15 • 12 12 • 2 • 15 • 2 1 2 • 2 1 6 = = = 6 55 44 3 3 • 2 • 4 • 11 5 • 11 • 3 2 • 4 5 8 5 3 5 = = = = 1 4-6

66 Probability of Compound Events
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-6 Suppose you roll two number cubes. What is the probability that you will roll an odd number on the first cube and a multiple of 3 on the second cube? P(odd) = = 3 6 1 2 There are 3 odd numbers out of six numbers. P(multiple of 3) = = 2 6 1 3 There are 2 multiples of 3 out of 6 numbers. P(odd and multiple of 3) = P(odd) • P(multiple of 3) = • 1 2 3 = 6 Substitute. Simplify. The probability that you will roll an odd number on the first cube and a multiple of 3 on the second cube is . 1 6 4-6

67 Probability of Compound Events
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-6 Suppose you have 3 quarters and 5 dimes in your pocket. You take out one coin, and then put it back. Then you take out another coin. What is the probability that you take out a dime and then a quarter? Since you replace the first coin, the events are independent. P(dime) = There are 5 out of 8 coins that are dimes. 5 8 P(quarter) = There are 3 out of 8 coins that are quarters. 3 8 P(dime and quarter) = P(dime) • P(quarter) = • = 5 8 3 15 64 Multiply. The probability that you take out a dime and then a quarter is 15 64 4-6

68 Probability of Compound Events
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-6 Suppose you have 3 quarters and 5 dimes in your pocket. You take out one coin, but you do not put it back. Then you take out another coin. What is the probability of first taking out a dime and then a quarter? P(dime) = There are 5 out of 8 coins that are dimes. 5 8 P(quarter after dime) = There are 3 out of 8 coins that are quarters. 3 7 P(dime then quarter) = P(dime) • P(quarter after dime) = • = 5 8 3 7 15 56 Multiply. The probability that you take out a dime and then a quarter is 15 56 4-6

69 Probability of Compound Events
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-6 A teacher must select 2 students for a conference. The teacher randomly picks names from among 3 freshmen, 2 sophomores, 4 juniors, and 4 seniors. What is the probability that a junior and then a senior are chosen? P(junior) = There are 4 juniors among 13 students. 4 13 P(senior after junior) = There are 4 seniors among 12 remaining students. 4 12 P(junior then senior) = P(junior) • P(senior after junior) = = = • 4 13 12 16 156 Substitute. 39 Simplify. The probability that the teacher will choose a junior then a senior is . 4 39 4-6

70 Probability of Compound Events
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-6 pages 222–224  Exercises 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 1 8. 0 9. 20. 1 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 0 28. 29. Indep.; you still have 2 choices for each coin with or without the other coin. 30. Dep.; with one name gone the data set changes. 31. Indep.; the data set hasn’t changed. 32. Answers may vary. Sample: For dep. events, the outcome of the first event affects the outcome of the second (example: picking a marble out of a bag, and then picking a second marble without replacing the first one). For independent events, the outcomes do not affect each other (example: picking the second marble after replacing the first). 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 0 2 27 1 9 16 81 4 11 3 55 1 36 2 7 3 22 1 6 9 15 45 1 18 1 18 1 9 1 4 25 36 4 81 4-6

71 Probability of Compound Events
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-6 33. a. 0.58 b.  34. a-c. Check students’ work. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. a. b. c. d. e. Answers may vary. Sample: 1; = 1 43. a.  b.  c. 5 44. a.  b.  c.  45. a. 12 b.  c.  46. C 47. F 48. B 20 77 20 77 1 6 2 7 15 77 20 77 20 77 1 10 1 3125 1 15,625 1 12 1 36 1 36 1 6 1 5 5 6 1 3 1 15 1 18 2 7 15 77 4-6

72 Probability of Compound Events
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-6 49. [2] P(green, green) = • = = , P(red, red) = • = = , P(r, r) is twice as likely as P(g, g). [1] correct calculations for both probabilities but incorrect statement OR correct calculations for one probability and correct statement based on that answer 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 4, –4 3 9 2 8 6 72 1 12 4 11 21 7 55. 2 56. all real numbers 57. No solution; abs. value can’t be negative. 58. No solution; abs. value can’t be negative. 59. t < 17 or t > 35 4-6

73 Probability of Compound Events
ALGEBRA 1 LESSON 4-6 You roll two number cubes. Find each probably. 1. P(odd and even) 2. P(1 or 2 and less than 5) You select letters from the following: A A B B B C D D E F G G G and do not replace them. Find each probability. 3. P(A then B) 4. P(vowel then G) 1 4 2 9 1 26 3 52 4-6

74 Solving and Applying Proportions
ALGEBRA 1 CHAPTER 4 1. 15 2. 7.5 3. 2.4 4. 20 5. 40 6. 64% 7. 20 8. 12 cm 9. 4% 10. $7.80 %; increase 12. 25%; decrease 13. 10%; decrease %; increase 15. 16. 18. 20. 1 mi ft 23. a. b.  c. 0 carnations for $6.99 25. Answers may vary. Sample: Four cards have one letter each: A, B, C, or D. What is the probability that the first card you select is A and the second is B, if you don’t replace the first card before selecting the second card? 9 14 1 2 3 5 1 5 1 6 1 12 4-A

75 Solving and Applying Proportions
ALGEBRA 1 CHAPTER 4 26. a. about 1143% b. Sample: Use the second row. Subtract the amount in the first column from the amount in the second column. Divide the result by the amount in the first column and multiply by 100. 27. a. b. c. 1 4 4 15 1 4 4-A


Download ppt "   Ratios and Proportion Write each fraction in simplest form."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google