This question checks your ability to recognise direct proportion from different cost calculations.
Direct proportion means the unit cost stays constant when quantities change.
Direct proportion describes a relationship where two quantities increase or decrease together at a constant rate. In GCSE Maths, this idea is often tested using cost and quantity examples. The key feature of direct proportion in these problems is that the cost per item remains the same, even when the number of items changes.
When identifying whether a situation shows direct proportion, you are not required to calculate the final price in detail. Instead, you should focus on whether the relationship between quantity and cost is consistent.
The most reliable way to check for direct proportion is to find the unit cost. The unit cost is the cost of one item. If the unit cost stays the same before and after the change in quantity, then the relationship is directly proportional.
Example: If 6 oranges cost £3.00, the unit cost is £3.00 ÷ 6 = £0.50 per orange. If 10 oranges cost £5.00, the unit cost is still £0.50 per orange. Because the unit cost remains constant, this situation shows direct proportion.
Direct proportion can also be identified by scaling. If the quantity is multiplied or divided by a number, the cost should be multiplied or divided by the same number.
Example: If the number of items doubles, the total cost should also double. If the number of items halves, the total cost should also halve. This consistent scaling confirms a direct proportional relationship.
For example, special offers such as “buy one get one free” do not follow direct proportion because the unit cost changes.
Being able to recognise direct proportion is important not only for exams but also for everyday decision-making. Unit pricing helps shoppers compare value, businesses calculate costs accurately, and recipes are scaled correctly. Understanding this concept allows you to spot when prices are fair and when they are not.
Do I always need to calculate the final cost?
No. Often, checking whether the unit cost stays the same is enough.
How can I tell if something is not direct proportion?
If the unit cost changes, or if the relationship does not scale evenly, it is not direct proportion.
In GCSE Maths multiple-answer questions, check every option carefully. Even if one example is correct, others may also show direct proportion. Never assume only one answer unless the question says so.
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