Lesson 7Scale Drawings

Learning Goal

Let’s explore scale drawings.

Learning Targets

  • I can explain what a scale drawing is, and I can explain what its scale means.

  • I can use a scale drawing and its scale to find actual distances.

  • I can use actual distances and a scale to find scaled distances.

Lesson Terms

  • scale
  • scale drawing

Warm Up: What Is a Scale Drawing?

Problem 1

Here are some drawings of a school bus, a quarter, and the subway lines around Boston, Massachusetts. The first three drawings are scale drawings of these objects.

Three scale drawings of the rear of a school bus, a quarter, and subway lines.

The next three drawings are not scale drawings of these objects.

Same items, but they are drawn differently. Examples, the bus is messy, the quarter is not a circle, and the subway lines are more uniform.

Discuss with your partner what a scale drawing is.

Activity 1: Sizing Up a Basketball Court

Your teacher will give you a scale drawing of a basketball court. The drawing does not have any measurements labeled, but it says that 1 centimeter represents 2 meters.

Problem 1

Measure the distances on the scale drawing that are labeled a–d to the nearest tenth of a centimeter. Record your results in the first row of the table.

measurement

(a) length
of court

(b) width
of court

(c) hoop
to hoop

(d) 3 point line
to sideline

scale drawing

actual court

Problem 2

The statement “1 cm represents 2 m” is the scale of the drawing. It can also be expressed as “1 cm to 2 m,” or “1 cm for every 2 m.” What do you think the scale tells us?

Problem 3

How long would each measurement from the first question be on an actual basketball court? Explain or show your reasoning.

Problem 4

On an actual basketball court, the bench area is typically 9 meters long.

  1. Without measuring, determine how long the bench area should be on the scale drawing.

  2. Check your answer by measuring the bench area on the scale drawing. Did your prediction match your measurement?

Activity 2: Tall Structures

Problem 1

Here is a scale drawing of some of the world’s tallest structures.

Structures shown from shortest to tallest are, Great Pyramid, Eiffel Tower, Willis Tower, CN Tower, Burj Khalifa.
  1. About how tall is the actual Willis Tower? About how tall is the actual Great Pyramid? Be prepared to explain your reasoning.

  2. About how much taller is the Burj Khalifa than the Eiffel Tower? Explain or show your reasoning.

  3. Measure the line segment that shows the scale to the nearest tenth of a centimeter. Express the scale of the drawing using numbers and words.

Are you ready for more?

Problem 1

The tallest mountain in the United States, Mount Denali in Alaska, is about 6,190 m tall. If this mountain were shown on the scale drawing, how would its height compare to the heights of the structures? Explain or show your reasoning.

Lesson Summary

Scale drawings are two-dimensional representations of actual objects or places. Floor plans and maps are some examples of scale drawings. On a scale drawing:

  • Every part corresponds to something in the actual object.

  • Lengths on the drawing are enlarged or reduced by the same scale factor.

  • A scale tells us how actual measurements are represented on the drawing. For example, if a map has a scale of “1 inch to 5 miles” then a -inch line segment on that map would represent an actual distance of 2.5 miles

Sometimes the scale is shown as a segment on the drawing itself. For example, here is a scale drawing of a stop sign with a line segment that represents 25 cm of actual length.

The width of the octagon in the drawing is about three times the length of this segment, so the actual width of the sign is about , or 75 cm.

Because a scale drawing is two-dimensional, some aspects of the three-dimensional object are not represented. For example, this scale drawing does not show the thickness of the stop sign.

A scale drawing may not show every detail of the actual object; however, the features that are shown correspond to the actual object and follow the specified scale.

A picture of a stop sign