Writing Equations to Model Relationships (Part 1)

Student Summary

Suppose your class is planning a trip to a museum. The cost of admission is $7 per person,
and the cost of renting a bus for the day is $180.

  • If 24 students and 3 teachers are going, we know the cost will be 7(24)+7(3)+1807(24) + 7(3) + 180,
    or 7(24+3)+1807(24+3) + 180, dollars.
  • If 30 students and 4 teachers are going, the cost will be 7(30+4)+1807(30+4) + 180 dollars.

Notice that the numbers of students and teachers can vary. This means that the cost of admission and the total cost of the trip can also vary, because they depend on how many people are going.

Letters are helpful for representing quantities that vary. If ss represents the number of students who are going, tt represents the number of teachers, and CC represents the total cost, we can model the quantities and constraints by writing

C=7(s+t)+180C = 7(s+t) + 180

Some quantities may be fixed. In this example, the bus rental costs $180 regardless of how many students and teachers are going (assuming only one bus is needed).

Letters can also be used to represent quantities that are constant. We might do this when we don’t know what the value is, or when we want to understand the relationship between quantities (rather than the specific values).

For instance, if the bus rental is BB dollars, we can express the total cost of the trip as C=7(s+t)+BC = 7(s + t) + B. No matter how many teachers or students are going on the trip,
BB dollars need to be added to the cost of admission.

Visual / Anchor Chart

Standards

Building On
6.RP.3.c

Use ratio and rate reasoning to solve real-world and mathematical problems.

Addressing
A-CED.21 question

Create equations and linear inequalities in two variables to represent a real-world context.

Q35 · 6ptJanuary 2026
Regents January 2026 Question 35
A-CED.36 questions

Represent constraints by equations or inequalities, and by systems of equations and/or inequalities, and interpret solutions as viable or non-viable options in a modeling context.

Q2 · 2ptJune 2024
Regents June 2024 Question 2
Q35 · 6ptJune 2024
Regents June 2024 Question 35
Q31 · 4ptJanuary 2025
Regents January 2025 Question 31
Q35 · 6ptAugust 2025
Regents August 2025 Question 35
Q35 · 6ptJanuary 2025
Regents January 2025 Question 35
Q35 · 6ptJune 2025
Regents June 2025 Question 35
F-BF.1.b

Write a function that describes a relationship between two quantities.