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hscscience Maths Std · Y11
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Module 1 · L12 of 13 ~45 min ⚡ +75 XP available

Direct Variation and Proportional Relationships

Recognise direct variation, calculate the constant of variation, and explain why proportional graphs pass through the origin. In this lesson you'll distinguish direct variation from general linear equations and apply $y = kx$ to proportional real-world problems.

Today's hook — Apples cost $4 per kilogram with no fixed fee. If you buy twice as many kilograms, what happens to the cost? And why does the graph of this relationship always pass through the origin, no matter what?
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Worksheets

Practise this lesson

Three printable worksheets that build from foundations to mastery — or build your own from any module’s questions.

01
Recall — your gut answer first
+5 XP warm-up

Apples cost $4 per kilogram with no fixed fee. If you buy twice as many kilograms, what happens to the cost?

Without calculating — write what changes and what stays constant. Is there anything you pay before buying any apples?

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02
Direct variation — the model to own
+5 XP to read

Direct variation is the simplest proportional relationship. It uses one equation and one key fact: zero input always gives zero output.

$k$ is the constant of variation — it is the rate that links $y$ to $x$. Because there is no fixed starting amount, the graph must pass through the origin $(0,0)$. Every point on the graph has the same ratio $y/x = k$.

EQUATION y = kx FIND k k = y/x k = constant graph through (0,0) y/x = k always e.g. C = 4k
$y = kx$ — no fixed fee, graph through the origin
No fixed starting amount
If the input is zero, the output is also zero. No fixed fee, no starting value. The graph passes through $(0,0)$.
If $x$ doubles, $y$ doubles
Direct variation is perfectly proportional. Double the input, double the output. This is because there is no added constant.
Linear is not always direct variation
$y = 5x + 12$ is linear but NOT direct variation — it has a starting value of 12. Only $y = kx$ (no added constant) is direct variation.
03
What you'll master
Know

Key facts

  • Direct variation can be written as $y = kx$.
  • $k$ is the constant of variation.
  • A direct variation graph passes through the origin.
Understand

Concepts

  • Direct variation has no fixed starting amount.
  • If $x$ doubles, $y$ doubles in a direct variation relationship.
  • Not every straight line is direct variation.
Can do

Skills

  • Recognise direct variation from tables and equations.
  • Calculate $k$ using $k = \dfrac{y}{x}$.
  • Use $y = kx$ to solve proportional problems.
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Key terms
Direct variationA relationship of the form $y = kx$ in which the ratio $y/x$ is always constant and the graph passes through the origin.
Constant of variation ($k$)The fixed ratio $k = y/x$ in a direct variation relationship; found by dividing any output by its matching input ($x \ne 0$).
ProportionalTwo quantities are proportional if their ratio is constant. In direct variation, $y$ is proportional to $x$.
OriginThe point $(0,0)$ on the coordinate plane. Direct variation graphs always pass through the origin.
Linear relationshipAny relationship whose graph is a straight line. Not all linear relationships are direct variation — some have a non-zero intercept.
Ratio $y/x$In direct variation, this ratio equals $k$ for every non-zero point on the line. Use it to check whether a table shows direct variation.
05
Direct variation has no fixed starting amount
core concept

A direct variation relationship has the form $y = kx$.

If the input is zero, the output is also zero. That is why the graph passes through the origin $(0,0)$. There is no fixed fee, no starting deposit, no amount that exists before the relationship begins.

Common error — not every linear equation is direct variation. A relationship such as $y = 5x + 12$ is linear, but it is NOT direct variation because it has a starting value of 12. For direct variation, the equation must be exactly $y = kx$ with no added constant.
1 2 3 4 5 6 1 2 3 4 5 6 x y y = 1.5x y/x = 1.5 (constant) Always passes through (0,0) origin (0,0)

Direct variation: a straight line through the origin — the ratio y/x stays constant at every point

What to write in your book
  • Direct variation: $y = kx$ where $k$ is the constant of variation.
  • Graph always passes through $(0,0)$. When $x = 0$, $y = 0$ (no fixed amount).
  • To find $k$: use any non-zero point: $k = y \div x$.
  • $y = 5x + 12$ is linear but NOT direct variation (has intercept 12 $\ne 0$).

Did you get this? True or false: the equation $y = 7x + 3$ represents direct variation.

PROBLEM 1 · WRITE A DIRECT VARIATION EQUATION

Apples cost $4 per kilogram. Let $C$ be the cost in dollars for $k$ kilograms. Write the direct variation equation.

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Check: is there a fixed fee? No — there is no charge before buying any apples.
When $k = 0$ kg, cost is $0. This confirms direct variation (passes through origin).
PROBLEM 2 · FIND THE CONSTANT OF VARIATION

A car travels 180 km in 3 hours at a constant speed. Let $d$ be distance and $t$ be time. Find $k$ and write the equation.

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Assume direct variation: $d = kt$
Constant speed with no fixed offset — when $t = 0$, $d = 0$. Graph passes through the origin.
PROBLEM 3 · RECOGNISE DIRECT VARIATION FROM A TABLE

Decide whether the table below shows direct variation. If so, find $k$ and write the equation.

$x$0246
$y$091827
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Check the table includes $(0,0)$: yes, when $x = 0$, $y = 0$.
Direct variation always passes through the origin. If the table had a non-zero value at $x = 0$, it would not be direct variation.
What to write in your book
  • Two checks for direct variation from a table: (1) does it include $(0,0)$? (2) is $y/x$ constant for all non-zero points?
  • For the apple example: $k = 4$ means every additional kilogram adds $4 to the cost.
  • For the car example: $k = 60$ km/h means every additional hour adds 60 km to the distance.
  • $y = 4.5x$: double $x$, double $y$. Triple $x$, triple $y$. This is the defining feature of proportional relationships.

Quick check: A table has points $(0,0)$, $(3,12)$, $(6,24)$. What is the constant of variation $k$?

Linear vs Direct Variation Comparison Equation Linear? Direct variation? Why? y = 3x Yes Yes Passes through (0,0) y = 3x + 5 Yes No Starts at 5, not 0 C = 12 + 4k Yes No Has a fixed charge ($12) Critical: for direct variation, the equation must be exactly y = kx with no added constant.
Trap 01
Calling $y = 5x + 12$ direct variation
$y = 5x + 12$ is linear but it has a y-intercept of 12. When $x = 0$, $y = 12 \ne 0$. Direct variation requires the graph to pass through $(0,0)$. If there is a fixed fee or starting value, it is NOT direct variation.
Trap 02
Forgetting to check $(0,0)$ in a table
A table can have a constant difference between outputs and still not be direct variation if the $x = 0$ row does not give $y = 0$. Always check both conditions: (1) includes $(0,0)$, and (2) $y/x$ is constant.
Trap 03
Using $k = x/y$ instead of $k = y/x$
The constant of variation is $k = y \div x$, not $x \div y$. Using the wrong ratio gives a reciprocal answer. Check: substitute back into $y = kx$ to verify your value of $k$ gives correct outputs.
What to write in your book
  • Two quick checks for direct variation: (1) equation has no added constant, (2) graph passes through $(0,0)$.
  • $k = y \div x$ (not $x \div y$). Always verify by substituting back.
  • If a table starts at $(0,0)$ and has constant $y/x$ ratio, it is direct variation.
  • Trap check: linear with intercept $\ne 0$ is NOT direct variation, even if it is a straight line.

Fill the gap: A car travels 180 km in 3 hours. The constant of variation $k = \dfrac{180}{3} =$ , so the equation is $d =$ 60$t$.

1

A recipe uses 250 g of flour for each cake. Write a formula for flour $F$ for $c$ cakes.

2

A worker earns $28 per hour with no allowance. Write a formula for pay $P$ after $h$ hours.

3

Decide whether $y = 7x + 3$ is direct variation. Explain.

4

A table has points $(0,0)$, $(2,14)$, $(5,35)$. Find $k$ and write the equation.

Odd one out: Three of these statements about direct variation are correct. Which one is wrong?

10
Revisit your thinking

Earlier you predicted what happens when you double the kilograms of apples. Let's confirm:

The apple cost is $C = 4k$. If kilograms double from 2 to 4, cost doubles from $8 to $16. If kilograms triple from 2 to 6, cost triples from $8 to $24. This is because there is no fixed fee added — the graph passes through $(0,0)$ and every increase in $k$ produces an exactly proportional increase in $C$.

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01
Multiple choice
+5 XP per correct · +25 XP all-correct

Pick your answer, then rate your confidence — that tells the system what to drill next. Each retry pulls a fresh mix from the bank.

02
Short answer
ApplyBand 33 marks

Q1. A worker earns $32 per hour with no allowance. Write a direct variation equation for pay $P$ after $h$ hours. State the constant of variation and explain what it represents. (3 marks)

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ApplyBand 33 marks

Q2. A table includes $(0,0)$, $(3,21)$ and $(5,35)$. Find $k$ and write the equation. (3 marks)

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AnalyseBand 42 marks

Q3. Explain why $C = 10 + 4k$ is not direct variation even though it is linear. (2 marks)

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📖 Comprehensive answers (click to reveal)

Drill 1: $F = 250c$  ·  2: $P = 28h$  ·  3: Not direct variation — it has a y-intercept of 3, so when $x = 0$, $y = 3 \ne 0$ (does not pass through origin).  ·  4: $k = 14/2 = 7$ (check: $35/5 = 7$). Equation: $y = 7x$.

Q1 (3 marks): $P = 32h$ [1]. Constant of variation $k = 32$ [1]. It represents the pay rate of $32 per hour — each additional hour worked adds $32 to total pay [1].

Q2 (3 marks): Table includes $(0,0)$ confirming possible direct variation [1]. $k = 21/3 = 7$ (check: $35/5 = 7$, constant ratio confirmed) [1]. Equation: $y = 7x$ [1].

Q3 (2 marks): $C = 10 + 4k$ has a y-intercept of 10, meaning when $k = 0$ kg, $C = \$10 \ne 0$ [1]. A direct variation equation must have the form $y = kx$ with no added constant, so the graph must pass through the origin. This equation does not pass through the origin [1].

01
Boss battle · Origin Check
earn bronze · silver · gold

For each relationship, check whether it has the form $y = kx$ and passes through the origin. Beat the boss to bank a tier — gold (90% + speed), silver (75%), or bronze (50%). Replays welcome.

⚔ Enter the arena
02
Science Jump · platform challenge

Climb platforms by answering direct variation questions. Pool: lesson 12.

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