Lesson 9: Practice Problems

Problem 1

Han ran 10 meters in 2.7 seconds. Priya ran 10 meters in 2.4 seconds.

  1. Who ran faster? Explain how you know.

  2. At this rate, how long would it take each person to run 50 meters? Explain or show your reasoning.

Problem 2

A scooter travels 30 feet in 2 seconds at a constant speed.

A double number line-the top line is distance (feet) and the bottom is time (in seconds) with 6 tick marks starting at 0 and a third tick mark labeled 30 on top and 2 below it.
  1. What is the speed of the scooter in feet per second?

  2. Complete the double number line to show the distance the scooter travels after 1, 3, 4, and 5 seconds.

  3. A skateboard travels 55 feet in 4 seconds. Is the skateboard going faster, slower, or the same speed as the scooter?

Problem 3

A cargo ship traveled 150 nautical miles in 6 hours at a constant speed. How far did the cargo ship travel in one hour?

A double number line with one tick mark at the beginning and one at the end. The top number line is labeled “distance traveled, in nautical miles” with the first tick mark labeled 0 and the last tick mark labeled 150. The bottom number line is labeled “elapsed time, in hours” with the first tick mark labeled 0 and the last tick mark labeled 6.

Problem 4 From Unit 2 Lesson 3

A recipe for pasta dough says, “Use 150 grams of flour per large egg.”

  1. How much flour is needed if 6 large eggs are used?

  2. How many eggs are needed if 450 grams of flour are used?

Problem 5 From Unit 2 Lesson 8

The grocery store is having a sale on frozen vegetables. 4 bags are being sold for $11.96. At this rate, what is the cost of:

  1. 1 bag

  2. 9 bags

Problem 6 From Unit 2 Lesson 7

A pet owner has 5 cats. Each cat has 2 ears and 4 paws.

  1. Complete the double number line to show the numbers of ears and paws for 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 cats.

    A double number line labeled number of ears on top and number of paws below. They both start at 0.
  2. If there are 3 cats in the room, what is the ratio of ears to paws?

  3. If there are 4 cats in the room, what is the ratio of paws to ears?

  4. If all 5 cats are in the room, how many more paws are there than ears?

Problem 7 From Unit 2 Lesson 5

Each of these is a pair of equivalent ratios. For each pair, explain why they are equivalent ratios or draw a representation that shows why they are equivalent ratios.

  1. and

  2. and

  3. and