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Comparing Rates Activity
Comparing Rates Activity
Comparing Rates Activity
Comparing Rates Activity
Comparing Rates Activity
Comparing Rates Activity
Comparing Rates Activity
Comparing Rates Activity
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Description

This is a great activity to have your students compare rates. Students will work in groups of 2-4 and receive information about how quickly deliver companies are delivering their packages. Students will be provided information as a unit rate, a table, rate or graph. Each student will then use that information to answer questions about the delivery company they have been assignments. Group members must then come together to order the delivery companies from fastest to slowest.

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Comparing Rates Activity

Amy W
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Highlights

Digital downloads
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Grades
5th - 7th
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Standards
Pages
6
Teaching Duration
45 minutes

Description

This is a great activity to have your students compare rates. Students will work in groups of 2-4 and receive information about how quickly deliver companies are delivering their packages. Students will be provided information as a unit rate, a table, rate or graph. Each student will then use that information to answer questions about the delivery company they have been assignments. Group members must then come together to order the delivery companies from fastest to slowest.

Report this resource to TPT
Reported resources will be reviewed by our team. Report this resource to let us know if this resource violates TPT's content guidelines.

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Standards

to see state-specific standards (only available in the US).
Understand the concept of a unit rate 𝘒/𝘣 associated with a ratio 𝘒:𝘣 with 𝘣 β‰  0, and use rate language in the context of a ratio relationship. For example, β€œThis recipe has a ratio of 3 cups of flour to 4 cups of sugar, so there is 3/4 cup of flour for each cup of sugar.” β€œWe paid $75 for 15 hamburgers, which is a rate of $5 per hamburger.”
Use ratio and rate reasoning to solve real-world and mathematical problems, e.g., by reasoning about tables of equivalent ratios, tape diagrams, double number line diagrams, or equations.
Make tables of equivalent ratios relating quantities with whole-number measurements, find missing values in the tables, and plot the pairs of values on the coordinate plane. Use tables to compare ratios.
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