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Discover how a straight line through the origin tells the story of every proportional relationship—and why the unit rate and the slope are the same number.
People have been comparing quantities for thousands of years. Long before anyone wrote an equation, farmers, builders, and traders needed to answer questions like "If 3 bags of grain cost 12 coins, how much do 7 bags cost?" That kind of thinking—where two quantities grow together at a steady rate—is what we call a proportional relationship.
So the story is this: people started with proportions in everyday life, then someone invented a way to graph them, and finally mathematicians realized that the unit rate you calculate from a proportion and the slope you see on a graph are actually the same thing. That connection is what this whole lesson is about.
Before we start graphing, let's nail down the key vocabulary. Each idea below builds on the one before it, so read them in order.
A proportional relationship has two special features on a coordinate plane: it makes a straight line, and that line passes through the origin (0, 0). The diagram below shows the relationship y = 3x—for every 1 step to the right, the line goes up 3.
Look at the yellow triangle drawn between the points (2, 6) and (3, 9). The run (horizontal distance) is 1, and the rise (vertical distance) is 3. Dividing rise by run gives us 3 ÷ 1 = 3. That number is both the slope of the line and the unit rate. You can pick any two points on the line, and you'll always get the same slope. That's what makes it proportional.
Also notice the origin (0, 0) marked with a dashed circle. Every proportional relationship starts there because when x is 0, y must be 0 too. Zero pizzas cost zero dollars. Zero hours of work earn zero pay.
Now let's put the numbers into equations. There are two main formulas to know, and they work together perfectly.
This equation says "y equals k times x." There's no extra number being added or subtracted—just multiplication by k. That's why the graph always goes through the origin. If you plug in x = 0, you get y = k × 0 = 0.
The slope formula measures "rise over run" between two points. For a proportional relationship, you can always use one of your points as (0, 0). That simplifies things a lot:
Here's the big connection: when you use y = kx, the letter k plays three roles at once. It's the constant of proportionality, the slope of the line, and the unit rate. That's why graphing a proportional relationship is so powerful—everything shows up on the graph.
One of the coolest things about graphing is that you can compare proportional relationships side by side. A steeper line means a bigger unit rate. A flatter line means a smaller one. Let's look at three friends who earn different hourly wages.
Alex earns $5 per hour, so his line has a gentle slope. Bella earns $10 per hour—her line is steeper. Carlos earns $15 per hour and has the steepest line. All three lines start at the origin because at 0 hours, everyone has earned $0.
| Person | Unit Rate ($/hr) | Equation | Slope | Earnings at 4 hrs |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alex | $5 | y = 5x | 5 | $20 |
| Bella | $10 | y = 10x | 10 | $40 |
| Carlos | $15 | y = 15x | 15 | $60 |
The table confirms what the graph shows: the unit rate, the slope, and the constant in the equation are all the same number for each person. A bigger unit rate creates a steeper line, which means the y-values grow faster.
Let's walk through a complete problem from start to finish. Read every step carefully—this is the kind of problem you'll see on homework and tests.
110 ÷ 2 = 55 and 275 ÷ 5 = 55. Both give 55. ✓ This is proportional, so the line will pass through the origin.y = 55xslope = (275 − 110) ÷ (5 − 2) = 165 ÷ 3 = 55Not every straight line on a graph is proportional! Let's compare the two types so you never mix them up.
| Feature | Proportional (y = kx) | Non-Proportional (y = mx + b) |
|---|---|---|
| Graph shape | Straight line | Straight line |
| Passes through origin? | Yes — always (0, 0) | Not necessarily |
| Equation form | y = kx | y = mx + b (b ≠ 0) |
| y ÷ x is constant? | Yes, always the same | No, changes per point |
| Real-world example | $3 per pound of apples | $3 per pound + $5 delivery fee |
The biggest giveaway is whether the line passes through the origin. If a line crosses the y-axis at any point besides 0, there's an extra constant being added (like a delivery fee, a starting balance, or a membership fee). That makes it non-proportional even though it's still linear (a straight line).
The equation y = kx is actually a special case of a bigger idea you'll study soon: the slope-intercept form, y = mx + b. In that equation, m is the slope and b is the y-intercept (where the line crosses the y-axis).
| Concept | What You're Learning Now | What's Coming Next |
|---|---|---|
| Equation | y = kx | y = mx + b |
| y-intercept (b) | Always 0 | Can be any number |
| Slope meaning | Unit rate | Rate of change |
| Graph requirement | Must pass through (0, 0) | Can cross y-axis anywhere |
| Relationship type | Proportional | Linear (proportional or not) |
For proportional relationships, b = 0, which is why y = mx + 0 simplifies to y = mx (same thing as y = kx). So everything you're learning now—reading slopes, understanding unit rates, graphing lines—transfers directly to the more general version. You're building the foundation for all of linear algebra!
Later in the year, you'll also learn about systems of equations, where two lines cross on the same graph. The skills you're developing now—plotting points, reading slopes, writing equations—are exactly what you'll need.
Try these five problems on your own. Click "Show Answer" when you're ready to check your work.
A proportional relationship between two quantities means one is always a constant multiple of the other—expressed as the equation y = kx. When you graph this relationship on a coordinate plane, it always produces a straight line through the origin (0, 0). The number k plays three identical roles: it is the constant of proportionality, the unit rate (how much y changes per 1 unit of x), and the slope of the line (rise ÷ run). A steeper line means a greater unit rate, while a flatter line means a smaller one.
To identify a proportional relationship from a table, check whether y ÷ x gives the same value for every pair. To identify it from a graph, confirm the line is straight and passes through (0, 0). If either condition fails, the relationship is linear but not proportional—its equation will include a y-intercept (y = mx + b with b ≠ 0). Mastering this connection between tables, equations, and graphs prepares you for all of linear algebra in 8th grade and beyond.