Gradient as Rate of Change
Calculate gradient from two points and interpret it as a practical rate such as dollars per week, kilometres per hour or litres per minute. Gradient is not just a graph slope — it is a real-world measurement with units.
Practise this lesson
Three printable worksheets that build from foundations to mastery — or build your own from any module’s questions.
A savings balance increases from $120 to $210 over 6 weeks. How much is the balance increasing per week?
Without a formula — write the rate and explain how you found it. Make a prediction before the lesson walks through the steps.
Gradient measures how much the output changes for each 1-unit change in input. It is always a rate — and that rate must be expressed with context units.
Gradient = rise ÷ run on a graph. In a practical context it becomes dollars per week, kilometres per hour, or litres per minute. The sign matters: positive means increasing, negative means decreasing, zero means constant.
Key facts
- Gradient measures change in output divided by change in input.
- Gradient has units from the context.
- Positive, negative and zero gradients describe different trends.
Concepts
- Gradient is a practical rate of change, not just a graph calculation.
- The sign of the gradient tells whether the output increases, decreases or stays constant.
- Units make the rate meaningful.
Skills
- Calculate gradient from two points.
- Interpret gradient in context.
- Identify positive, negative and zero gradients.
Gradient tells how much the output changes for each 1-unit change in the input. It is not just a slope on a graph — it is a meaningful quantity tied to the real-world context.
If savings increase by $90 over 6 weeks, the rate is $\frac{90}{6} = 15$. The gradient is $15 per week.
What to write in your book
- Formula: $m = \dfrac{y_2 - y_1}{x_2 - x_1}$ — always output change over input change.
- Units: gradient inherits the units of the context. If $y$ is dollars and $x$ is weeks, $m$ is dollars per week.
- Positive $m$: output rising. Negative $m$: output falling. Zero $m$: horizontal line, no change.
- Real-world names for gradient: speed (km/h), rate of pay ($/h), flow rate (L/min), etc.
Quick check: A savings balance changes from $300 at week 0 to $450 at week 5. What is the gradient with correct units?
Gradient is change in output divided by change in input. Reversing this gives a different quantity and usually wrong units.
| Situation | Gradient | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Water drains from a tank | −4 L/min | Volume decreases by 4 litres each minute |
| Temperature stays constant | 0 °C/h | Temperature is not changing |
| Savings grow | +$25/week | Savings increase by $25 each week |
What to write in your book
- Positive gradient: line goes up left-to-right (e.g. savings increasing).
- Negative gradient: line goes down left-to-right (e.g. tank draining, balance decreasing).
- Zero gradient: horizontal line (e.g. temperature constant).
- Never reverse: gradient = $\Delta y / \Delta x$, not $\Delta x / \Delta y$.
True or false: A gradient of −6 L/min for a water tank means the tank is losing 6 litres every minute.
Worked examples · 3 in a row, reveal as you go
A savings balance is $120 at week 0 and $210 at week 6. Find the gradient.
A car has travelled 40 km after 0.5 h and 160 km after 2 h. Find the average rate of change.
Interpret each gradient in context.
| Situation | Gradient | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Water drains from a tank | −4 L/min | Volume decreases by 4 litres each minute |
| Temperature stays constant | 0 degrees per hour | Temperature is not changing |
| Savings grow | +$25/week | Savings increase by $25 each week |
What to write in your book
- Step 1: identify the two points $(x_1, y_1)$ and $(x_2, y_2)$.
- Step 2: calculate $\Delta y = y_2 - y_1$ (output change) and $\Delta x = x_2 - x_1$ (input change).
- Step 3: $m = \Delta y \div \Delta x$. Attach units from the context.
- Step 4: write a sentence interpreting the gradient in plain English with units.
Fill the gap: A tank volume increases from 15 L to 75 L over 4 minutes. The change in output is L and the change in input is min, giving a gradient of L/min.
Common errors · the 3 traps that cost marks
Quick-fire practice · 4 questions
A tank fills from 20 L to 95 L in 5 minutes. Find the gradient and interpret it.
A distance changes from 30 km at 0.5 h to 150 km at 2.5 h. Find the rate in km/h.
A bank balance changes from $500 to $380 over 4 weeks. Find and interpret the gradient.
Explain what a zero gradient would mean for a temperature graph.
Odd one out: Three of these are correct interpretations of gradient. Which one is wrong?
Earlier you estimated the savings rate for a balance that went from $120 to $210 over 6 weeks. Let's confirm:
Change in savings: $210 - 120 = 90$ dollars. Change in time: $6 - 0 = 6$ weeks.
$$m = \frac{90}{6} = \$15 \text{ per week}$$
The savings balance increased by $15 per week. This is the gradient — and it describes the rate of change in context.
Final check: True or false: to find gradient you always divide the output change by the input change, and the result carries context units.
Pick your answer, then rate your confidence — that tells the system what to drill next. Each retry pulls a fresh mix from the bank.
Q1. A tank volume increases from 15 L to 75 L over 4 minutes. Find the gradient and interpret it. (3 marks)
Q2. A car travels from 20 km at 0.25 h to 140 km at 1.75 h. Find the average speed. (3 marks)
Q3. Explain what a gradient of −6 L/min means for a water tank. (2 marks)
📖 Answers (click to reveal)
Q1 (3 marks): $\Delta y = 75 - 15 = 60$ L [1]. $\Delta x = 4$ min [1]. $m = 60 \div 4 = 15$ L/min. The tank fills at 15 litres per minute [1].
Q2 (3 marks): $\Delta y = 140 - 20 = 120$ km [1]. $\Delta x = 1.75 - 0.25 = 1.5$ h [1]. $m = 120 \div 1.5 = 80$ km/h [1].
Q3 (2 marks): The volume of water in the tank is decreasing [1] at a rate of 6 litres per minute [1].
Drill 1: $\Delta y = 75$, $\Delta x = 5$, $m = 15$ L/min (tank fills at 15 L/min) · Drill 2: $\Delta y = 120$, $\Delta x = 2$, $m = 60$ km/h · Drill 3: $\Delta y = -120$, $\Delta x = 4$, $m = -30$ $/week (balance falling $30/week) · Drill 4: Zero gradient means temperature is constant — not changing over time.
For each situation, identify the output change, input change and units before calculating the gradient. Beat the boss to bank a tier — gold (90% + speed), silver (75%), or bronze (50%). Replays welcome.
⚔ Enter the arenaClimb platforms by answering gradient and rate of change questions. Pool: lesson 10.
Mark lesson as complete
Tick when you've finished the practice and review.