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1. Molly says the slope of this line is equal to 1/3.

2. Brian says you can not find the slope of the line when there is a dot that is not plotted perfectly on the intersection of the graph.

Explain who is correct or if neither of them are correct.

1. Molly says the slope of this line is equal to 1/3. 2. Brian says you can not find-example-1
User Jannet
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1 Answer

4 votes

The point (5,7) is clearly marked on the graph. So it's a good point to use.

We need another point on this line. Feel free to pick any you want. It's best to go with a point where x and y are both whole numbers. I'll go for (11,9)

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Use the slope formula to find the slope through (5,7) and (11,9)


\text{Given Points: } (\text{x}_1,\text{y}_1) = (5,7) \text{ and }(\text{x}_2,\text{y}_2) = (11,9)\\\\m = \text{slope} = \frac{\text{rise}}{\text{run}} = \frac{\text{change in y}}{\text{change in x}}\\\\m = \frac{\text{y}_2 - \text{y}_1}{\text{x}_2 - \text{x}_1}\\\\m = (9-7)/(11-5)\\\\m = (2)/(6)\\\\m = (1)/(3)\\\\

The slope is 1/3. Molly is correct.

Brian has a slight point in that the (x,y) in the diagram isn't on a grid marker, so that's probably why he thought finding the slope wasn't possible. But imagine moving the (x,y) to (11,9) to help see why the slope is 1/3.

To go from (5,7) to (11,9) we go up 2, then right 6. This is what the 2/6 refers to. Then 2/6 reduces to 1/3.

User Corey Levinson
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