Proportions - Free Educational videos for Students in K-12 | Lumos Learning

Proportions - Free Educational videos for Students in k-12


Proportions - By Anywhere Math



Transcript
00:0-1 Welcome to nowhere . Math . I'm Jeff , Jacobson
00:01 . And today we're gonna talk all about proportions .
00:04 Let's get started . Mhm . Alright . Before we
00:24 get to our first example , let's talk about what
00:26 exactly a proportion is . So , first a proportion
00:30 is just an equation . Right ? We're gonna have
00:33 an equal sign an equation stating that two ratios Are
00:37 equivalent . Here's an example . Two or three .
00:41 That's a ratio 2-3 . 4/6 . That's another ratio
00:45 4-6 and they are equal to each other there in
00:49 an equation . So , this is an example of
00:53 a proportion . The way you read . This is
00:56 Basically saying that two ratios two is 2 three .
01:01 That's the first ratio as that's where you have the
01:06 equal sign as 4 to 6 . That's how you
01:09 would say that proportion out loud . And this is
01:13 how it would be written . All right , let's
01:14 get to our first example . Alright , example ,
01:16 one tell whether 6/4 and 8 12 form a proportion
01:21 . So we want to see if they are equal
01:23 to each other . If we can make an equation
01:25 with those two ratios , I'm gonna show you three
01:28 different methods on how to tell if they form a
01:32 proportion . So the first method is the simplest form
01:36 . We compare each ratio simplest form and if they
01:39 are the same than they would form a proportion .
01:42 So six force in simplest form Would be three hats
01:48 . Okay , compare that with 8 , 12 would
01:51 be 2/3 . These are not equivalent , They're not
01:56 the same . So this no does not form a
02:01 proportion . Those two fractions do not form a proportion
02:04 . I met the two . I'm just gonna call
02:06 mental math . And the way this works is if
02:09 I'm comparing 6/4 , if I'm trying to see is
02:13 that going to be equal to or equivalent to 8/12
02:18 ? Right . I got a question there because I'm
02:20 not sure if they form a proportion . I can
02:23 just use a mental math . Well to get from
02:26 4 to 12 I would multiply by three . Anything
02:30 I do to the denominator should do the to the
02:32 numerator if it was going to be equivalent . So
02:35 if I did six times three , does that give
02:38 me eight ? No , six times 3 is 18
02:42 , not eight . So again that would be no
02:46 They do not form a proportion . Okay , Method
02:49 three . We're gonna call cross products . So again
02:53 , if I write it 6/4 , I'm trying to
02:56 see if they are equal to each other . Cross
02:59 products means you take the numerator and the denominator going
03:04 across and you multiply them together . If they are
03:09 proportional . When you multiply them together , you're gonna
03:12 get the same thing on both sides . So if
03:15 I do four times eight , is that equal to
03:18 six times 12:32 ? Which is not equal to 72
03:24 . So once again no they do not form a
03:28 proportion . They're not proportional . If those were equal
03:31 to each other then yes they would be . Let's
03:33 try another example . Okay example to tell whether X
03:36 and Y are proportional . Just like the previous example
03:39 . I have three methods that I could use to
03:41 decide whether X and Y are proportional . But I
03:44 don't want to do all three for me . I'm
03:46 just gonna do simplest form . I'm gonna compare X
03:50 . And Y . If they're proportional so I need
03:51 ratios . My first one would be one half 2
03:56 3 . And if I want to compare that I
03:58 can compare it with either . I'll just compare it
04:01 with 1-6 . You got to make sure that my
04:05 numerator is here . Those are both representing the excess
04:09 . My denominators are both representing the wise . If
04:13 I had this switch it wouldn't work . Uh So
04:16 you gotta make sure numerator numerator are talking about the
04:19 same thing and same thing with denominators . So let's
04:23 compare in simplest form . The nice thing that's already
04:26 done . That's in simplest form . But here I've
04:29 got a complex fraction . 1/2 divided by three is
04:34 the same thing as one half times one third which
04:37 is 16 And what do you know ? 16 is
04:41 equal to 1/6 . So yes they do form a
04:45 proportion . They are proportional and it wouldn't matter if
04:49 I tried another 1 3/2 divided by nine 3/2 29
04:57 There's my ratio . If I put that in simplest
04:59 form that's the same thing as three halves times 1/9
05:05 . Simplify 13 and I get 16 again . And
05:12 sometimes it is a good idea to check more than
05:14 one ratio , but we got 16 again . So
05:16 yes , they are proportional . Here's some to try
05:19 on your own . All right . Here's the last
05:27 example . You swim your first four laps in 2.4
05:32 minutes , you complete 16 laps in 12 minutes is
05:36 the number of laps proportional to your time . If
05:40 we're going to find if they're proportional , we first
05:42 need our ratios , well , our ratios are gonna
05:46 be time to lapse . So if I look ,
05:49 it took me 2.4 minutes to do four laps .
05:55 If I want to compare that with this , it
05:57 took 12 minutes to do 16 laps . If I
06:02 want to compare them , we've got those three methods
06:06 , I could do simplest form , I could do
06:08 mental math or I could also do that cross products
06:11 right here . Maybe you see that mental math would
06:15 be really , really useful To get from 4 to
06:19 16 . I would just times four Times four .
06:26 Times 4 is gonna be 9.6 , Which does not
06:32 equal 12 . So that would tell us no ,
06:35 they're not proportional . But that's just one method .
06:37 Let's try another one . All right . If we
06:38 want to try another method , we could try simplest
06:40 form . Well , right here , we've got a
06:43 decimal in the fraction . So let's first get rid
06:46 of that . So , we would make this times
06:48 10 times 10 . So that would become 24/40 .
06:52 And then if we simplify our common factor looks like
06:55 eight , Divide by eight , divided by eight .
06:59 And we would get three fists . If we simplify
07:03 this common factor is going to be four , we
07:07 would get 3/4 notice . Again , they don't have
07:11 the simplest form so they are not proportional . If
07:15 we want to try another method , we could also
07:18 compare their unit rates . As long as you've got
07:21 both the denominators the same . Then you just look
07:24 at the numerator . So that would be 2.4 right
07:27 , divide by four , divide by four . So
07:30 that we get one in the denominator . 2.4 divided
07:33 by four would be 0.6 . So that means they're
07:38 going it's taking 0.6 minutes for one lap . There's
07:42 my unit rate . How about here , Divided by
07:46 16 divided by 16 . Well 12 divided by 16
07:53 would be 0.16 and 120 would go seven times .
07:58 That's 42 4 , It's 11 . You get eight
08:03 leftover . Bring down to zero 16 in the 80
08:08 would go five times 0.75 minutes to go one lap
08:16 again , comparing their unit rates . They are not
08:20 the same , which means they are not proportional .
08:23 And if you're wondering why , why is the amount
08:26 of time not proportional to your laps ? You're gonna
08:29 get tired . Here's one more to try on your
08:32 own as always . Thank you so much for watching
08:36 , and if you like this video , please subscribe
00:0-1 .
Summarizer

DESCRIPTION:

OVERVIEW:

Proportions is a free educational video by Anywhere Math.

This page not only allows students and teachers view Proportions videos but also find engaging Sample Questions, Apps, Pins, Worksheets, Books related to the following topics.


GRADES:


STANDARDS:

Are you the Publisher?

EdSearch WebSearch