Lesson

Unit Price and Simple Money Data

Students learn to compare unit prices and use tables and graphs to read money data clearly.

Unit Price and Simple Money Data

What students learn

Students learn that unit price tells the cost for one item, one ounce, or one pound. Begin with to see how graph language helps compare numbers.

Why it matters

When students compare snack packs, school supplies, or other store items, unit price helps them find the better buy. shows how tables organize the numbers before a decision is made.

Learn the idea

Graphs make the data easier to see. connects the graph to the shopping decision.

Try it

Ask the student to compare two snack deals: 6 granola bars for $3.00 and 10 granola bars for $4.50. Have them find the unit price for each, decide the better buy, and explain how a table or graph could help.

Parent guide

Use grocery flyers, snack labels, or a simple hand-made table. Keep the focus on dividing price by quantity, then asking which choice gives the lower cost per one item.