Contributor: Elephango Editors. Lesson ID: 10776
Calculating with scales does not involve fish, unless you are trying to draw a six-foot sturgeon on a piece of notebook paper! Practice with easy online problems to learn this important math skill!
Lee drew a picture of his car for a comic book he is making. He wants his comic book to be accurate so that the car is the right size when it is next to people in the story.
In order to accomplish that, Lee decided on a scale for his drawings. Lee wants to use the scale of 1 inch to 4 feet.
Scale is a math concept you see and use all the time, probably without even knowing it!
Scale refers to when the actual size of something is enlarged or reduced by a specific amount, or scale.
For example, maps are scale drawings of actual places and distances. Blueprints are scale drawings of buildings. Toys and model cars or airplanes are scale figures of actual objects.
Even though the size changes from the actual to the scale, the proportions of the object stay the same.
For example, if you are making a scale drawing of a giraffe, the drawing will obviously be smaller than the actual size of a giraffe. However, the proportions will stay the same. You will still draw a tall and skinny giraffe, not a short and wide giraffe.
Let's look at the scale from the beginning of the lesson:
Lee wants to use the scale of 1 inch to 4 feet.
This means every 1 inch of Lee's drawing represents 4 feet of the actual size of the car.
This scale can be written as a ratio:
1:4
Scale size: actual size
The scale can also be written as a fractional proportion:
1 | |
4 |
scale size | |
actual size |
When calculating with scale, we use two fractional proportions.
On the left, we write the scale given in the story problem. Remember, Lee is using a scale of 1 inch to 4 feet:
On the right, we fill in the other information we know. We also identify the unknown information we need to solve for, labeling it as X.
In this story, we know Lee's car is actually 15 feet long. We need to figure out how long Lee will make the scale drawing.
Now, all you have to do is cross multiply to solve for X:
x = 3.75 which you can now plug back into the fractional proportion:
The actual size of Lee's car is 15 feet, and the scale drawing size of Lee's car should be 3.75 inches!
Before you move on to practice, watch this short video to learn more about scale!
Grade 7 Math 8.1A, Dimensions, Area, and Scale Drawings (New version) from JoAnn's School:
Click NEXT to visit the Got It? section to practice using scale!