Basic Math

Slope | Seventh Grade

Slope - Seventh Grade

Rise Over Run, Slope Formula, Graphing & Rate of Change

1. Understanding Slope

What is Slope?

Slope is a measure of how STEEP a line is

It tells you how much a line rises or falls

as you move from left to right

Slope = Rise Over Run

m = rise/run

Where:

m = slope

rise = vertical change (up or down)

run = horizontal change (left to right)

Types of Slope

Slope TypeValueDirection
Positive Slopem > 0Line goes UP ↗
Negative Slopem < 0Line goes DOWN ↘
Zero Slopem = 0Horizontal Line →
Undefined SlopeNo valueVertical Line ↑

2. Finding Slope from a Graph

Steps

Step 1: Choose two points on the line

Step 2: Count the RISE (vertical change)

• Count UP for positive rise

• Count DOWN for negative rise

Step 3: Count the RUN (horizontal change)

• Always count to the RIGHT (positive)

Step 4: Calculate slope = rise/run

Example

Find the slope of the line through points (1, 2) and (4, 8)

Step 1: Points are (1, 2) and (4, 8)

Step 2: Find the rise

From y = 2 to y = 8

Rise = 8 − 2 = 6 (going UP)

Step 3: Find the run

From x = 1 to x = 4

Run = 4 − 1 = 3 (going RIGHT)

Step 4: Calculate slope

m = rise/run = 6/3 = 2

Slope: m = 2

3. Finding Slope from Two Points

Slope Formula

m = (y₂ − y₁)/(x₂ − x₁)

Where:

(x₁, y₁) = first point

(x₂, y₂) = second point

m = slope

Steps

Step 1: Label the points (x₁, y₁) and (x₂, y₂)

Step 2: Subtract y-coordinates: y₂ − y₁

Step 3: Subtract x-coordinates: x₂ − x₁

Step 4: Divide: (y₂ − y₁)/(x₂ − x₁)

Example 1

Find the slope between (2, 3) and (5, 9)

Step 1: (x₁, y₁) = (2, 3) and (x₂, y₂) = (5, 9)

Step 2: Use formula

m = (y₂ − y₁)/(x₂ − x₁)

m = (9 − 3)/(5 − 2)

m = 6/3

m = 2

Slope: m = 2

Example 2: Negative Slope

Find the slope between (1, 8) and (4, 2)

m = (2 − 8)/(4 − 1)

m = −6/3

m = −2

Slope: m = −2 (negative slope, line goes down)

4. Finding Missing Coordinate Using Slope

Strategy

Use the slope formula and substitute known values

Then solve for the missing coordinate

Example 1: Missing y-coordinate

Find y if the slope between (2, 5) and (6, y) is 3

Step 1: Write the slope formula

m = (y₂ − y₁)/(x₂ − x₁)

Step 2: Substitute known values

3 = (y − 5)/(6 − 2)

3 = (y − 5)/4

Step 3: Solve for y

3 × 4 = y − 5

12 = y − 5

y = 17

Answer: y = 17

Example 2: Missing x-coordinate

Find x if the slope between (3, 4) and (x, 10) is 2

2 = (10 − 4)/(x − 3)

2 = 6/(x − 3)

2(x − 3) = 6

2x − 6 = 6

2x = 12

x = 6

Answer: x = 6

5. Graphing a Line Using Slope

Steps

Step 1: Start with a given point on the line

Step 2: Write slope as a fraction: m = rise/run

Step 3: From the starting point, move UP or DOWN (rise)

Step 4: Then move RIGHT (run)

Step 5: Mark the new point and draw the line

Example

Graph a line with slope m = 3/4 starting from point (1, 2)

Step 1: Plot starting point (1, 2)

Step 2: Slope = 3/4 means rise = 3, run = 4

Step 3: From (1, 2), move UP 3 units

New y = 2 + 3 = 5

Step 4: Move RIGHT 4 units

New x = 1 + 4 = 5

Step 5: New point is (5, 5)

Draw a line through (1, 2) and (5, 5)

Line passes through (1, 2) and (5, 5)

Negative Slope

For negative slope m = −2/3:

Rise = −2 (move DOWN 2)

Run = 3 (move RIGHT 3)

Line goes downward from left to right

6. Rate of Change

What is Rate of Change?

Rate of change is how fast one quantity

changes compared to another quantity

For LINEAR functions, rate of change = SLOPE!

Formula

Rate of Change = Δy/Δx

or

(y₂ − y₁)/(x₂ − x₁)

Constant Rate of Change

Definition: The rate of change is the SAME

between any two points on the line

→ This creates a STRAIGHT LINE

→ The slope is CONSTANT

7. Rate of Change from Tables

Steps

Step 1: Pick any two rows from the table

Step 2: Find the change in y-values

Step 3: Find the change in x-values

Step 4: Divide: Δy/Δx

Example

Find the rate of change:

xy
25
411
617

Solution:

Using first two rows:

Δy = 11 − 5 = 6

Δx = 4 − 2 = 2

Rate of change = 6/2 = 3

Check: Using rows 2 and 3:

Δy = 17 − 11 = 6

Δx = 6 − 4 = 2

Rate of change = 6/2 = 3 ✓

Constant rate of change = 3

8. Rate of Change from Graphs

Key Point

Finding rate of change from a graph is

the SAME as finding slope from a graph!

Steps

1. Pick two points on the graph

2. Count the rise (vertical change)

3. Count the run (horizontal change)

4. Calculate: rise/run

Rate of change = slope = rise/run

Real-World Example

Problem: A car travels 120 miles in 2 hours and 240 miles in 4 hours. What is the rate of change (speed)?

Points: (2, 120) and (4, 240)

Δy = 240 − 120 = 120 miles

Δx = 4 − 2 = 2 hours

Rate = 120/2 = 60

Rate of change = 60 miles per hour

Quick Reference: Slope Formulas

MethodFormula
Basic Slopem = rise/run
Slope from Two Pointsm = (y₂ − y₁)/(x₂ − x₁)
Rate of ChangeΔy/Δx = (y₂ − y₁)/(x₂ − x₁)

Slope Types

If m...Then line...
m > 0 (positive)Goes UP (↗)
m < 0 (negative)Goes DOWN (↘)
m = 0 (zero)Horizontal (→)
m = undefinedVertical (↑)

💡 Important Tips to Remember

Slope = rise/run: Always vertical change over horizontal change

Formula: m = (y₂ − y₁)/(x₂ − x₁)

Positive slope: Line goes UP from left to right

Negative slope: Line goes DOWN from left to right

Zero slope: Horizontal line (flat)

Undefined slope: Vertical line (straight up and down)

Rate of change = slope: For linear functions, they're the same!

Constant rate of change: Same slope throughout = straight line

From tables: Pick any two rows and use the formula

Graphing with slope: Start at a point, use rise/run to find next point

🧠 Memory Tricks & Strategies

Rise Over Run:

"Rise before you run - vertical before horizontal, get the slope done!"

Slope Formula:

"Y's on top, X's below - that's how the slope formula will go!"

Positive vs Negative:

"Positive slopes climb high, Negative slopes say goodbye (go down)!"

Horizontal vs Vertical:

"Horizontal has zero slope - it's flat, no hope! Vertical is undefined - straight up, you'll find!"

Rate of Change:

"Rate of change and slope are twins - for straight lines, slope always wins!"

Graphing with Slope:

"Start with a dot, rise then run - connect the points and you're done!"

Master Slope! 📈 📊

Remember: Slope = Rise/Run = (y₂ − y₁)/(x₂ − x₁)

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