Which Quantity Do You Control?
A car travels at 65 miles per hour.
- You decide how many hours the trip lasts
- Once you decide that — what else do you know automatically?
In 6.EE.B.6, you wrote
Controlled vs. Determined: Two Variable Types
The independent variable — what you choose or control → x-axis
The dependent variable — what responds to your choice → y-axis
For the car:
- You choose
(hours) — independent → x-axis (miles) is determined — dependent → y-axis
Building the Table:
| 0 | 0 |
| 1 | 65 |
| 2 | 130 |
| 3 | 195 |
| 4 | 260 |
Always include
Quick Check: Applying the Earnings Equation
Maria earns $12 per hour:
What is
Substitute, then check: does the unit rate match the coefficient?
A Non-Proportional Example:
| 0 | 10 |
| 1 | 13 |
| 2 | 16 |
| 3 | 19 |
At
Your Turn: Identify, Write, Build
A bathtub holds 60 gallons and drains at 4 gallons per minute.
- Which quantity do you control? Which responds?
- Write the equation (dependent on left)
- Build the table for
What is the water volume at
Check-In: What Does the Zero Row Mean?
For
- A) The garden grew 10 plants in week 1
- B) There were 10 plants before week 1
- C) The growth rate is 10 plants per week
Choose, then advance.
From Table to Graph: Same Pairs, Drawn
You already have the ordered pairs. Graphing means placing them as dots on a coordinate plane.
- Horizontal axis: independent variable
- Vertical axis: dependent variable
- Connect the dots — the pattern emerges
The graph is the table, drawn. Nothing new is invented.
Graph of : A Proportional Line
The line passes through the origin — at
Garden Graph: Line Avoids the Origin
The line does NOT start at the origin — it starts at
One Test Tells You Which Type It Is
Quick check: Does the output equal 0 when the input is 0?
- Yes → proportional → line through the origin
- No → non-proportional → line does not pass through the origin
Equation, Table, Graph: One Relationship
Three windows onto the same relationship — given any one, build the others:
- Equation → table: substitute values
- Table → graph: plot each pair as a dot
- Graph → equation: read starting value and rate
One relationship, three views.
Reading a Graph to Write an Equation
A line through
Step 1: Starting value at
Step 2: Rate —
Equation:
Your Turn: Write Equations from Graphs
Graph A:
Graph B:
For each:
- State the starting value
- State the rate per unit of
- Write the equation
One line passes through the origin; one does not.
What You Now Know and Watch Out For
✓ Independent → x-axis; dependent → y-axis
✓ Table starts at 0 — that row shows starting value
✓ Equation, table, graph: three views of a relationship
Axis follows meaning, not equation order
3 = rate; 10 = starting value
Non-origin line is correct, not an error
Where These Ideas Lead Next
- Grade 7: coefficient in
→ constant of proportionality - Grade 8: steepness + starting value → slope (
) + y-intercept ( ) in
The intuitions you're building now make those formalizations feel obvious.
Click to begin the narrated lesson
Use variables to represent two quantities in a real-world problem that change in relationship to one another