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USTET MathematicsRatio & ProportionCheat Sheet

Cheat sheet for USTET Mathematics — Ratio & Proportion. Compact, printable, and organised around the concepts University of Santo Tomas tests most frequently in the USTET 2026. Perfect for the week before exam day.

Exam context

The University of Santo Tomas Entrance Test is conducted by University of Santo Tomas and is scheduled for Early Q4 2026. The Mathematics subtest is marked as "Core section" in the official pattern, and Ratio & Proportion appears in position 2nd of 9 in the USTET Mathematics review rotation. Passing mark: Competitive overall score. Recent USTET 2026 papers have drawn roughly a meaningful share of questions from this subject.

Ratio & Proportion - Cheat sheet

Your last-minute revision companion for mastering ratio and proportion problems in UPCAT Math

Sections

Formulas

Formula

a : b = c : d ⟺ a/b = c/d

Meaning

a, b, c, d are terms in proportion; a and d are extremes, b and c are means

Watch Out

Don't confuse ratio order - first term goes with first term

When To Use

When two ratios are equal or when solving for unknown terms

Formula

Cross Product Rule: a × d = b × c

Meaning

Product of extremes equals product of means

Watch Out

Always cross-multiply correctly - diagonal terms only

When To Use

To solve for any missing term in a proportion

Formula

Ratio simplification: a : b = (a÷k) : (b÷k)

Meaning

k is the common factor of both terms

Watch Out

Find the GCD first - don't divide by wrong numbers

When To Use

To reduce ratios to lowest terms

Section Title

Basic Ratio Concepts

Important Facts

  • Ratios can be written as fractions, with colons, or with 'to'
  • Always simplify ratios like fractions (divide by GCD)
  • Ratios have no units - they're pure numbers
  • Order matters in ratios: 3:5 ≠ 5:3

Key Definitions

Term

Ratio

Example

3:5 or 3/5 or 3 to 5

Definition

Comparison of two quantities of the same kind

Term

Proportion

Example

3:5 = 6:10

Definition

Statement that two ratios are equal

Term

Continued Ratio

Example

2:3:5 means three quantities in this ratio

Definition

Ratio with three or more parts

Diagrams To Know

  • Ratio representation as parts of a whole
  • Cross-multiplication diagram for proportions

Formulas

Formula

Direct: y = kx or y₁/x₁ = y₂/x₂

Meaning

k is constant of proportionality; as x increases, y increases

Watch Out

Make sure relationship is actually direct - test with doubling

When To Use

When quantities increase or decrease together

Formula

Inverse: xy = k or x₁y₁ = x₂y₂

Meaning

k is constant; as x increases, y decreases proportionally

Watch Out

Workers-time, speed-time problems are usually inverse

When To Use

When one quantity increases while the other decreases

Section Title

Direct and Inverse Proportion

Important Facts

  • Direct: doubling one doubles the other
  • Inverse: doubling one halves the other
  • Always identify type before setting up equation
  • Graph of direct proportion passes through origin

Key Definitions

Term

Direct Proportion

Example

More pens cost more money

Definition

Two quantities increase or decrease at the same rate

Term

Inverse Proportion

Example

More workers finish job in less time

Definition

One quantity increases while the other decreases at same rate

Term

Constant of Proportionality

Example

In y = 3x, k = 3

Definition

The fixed value k in proportion equations

Diagrams To Know

  • Direct proportion graph (straight line through origin)
  • Inverse proportion graph (hyperbola)

Formulas

Formula

Total ÷ Sum of Ratio Parts = Value of One Share

Meaning

Find value of each part by dividing total by sum of all ratio parts

Watch Out

Always add up ALL ratio parts, including parts with larger numbers

When To Use

When dividing a total amount according to a given ratio

Formula

Each Part = (Ratio Part) × (Value of One Share)

Meaning

Multiply each ratio part by the share value to get actual amounts

Watch Out

Check that all parts add up to the original total

When To Use

After finding the share value, to get individual amounts

Section Title

Partitive Proportion

Important Facts

  • Sum all ratio parts first before dividing
  • Each person gets (their ratio part) × (share value)
  • All distributed amounts must sum to original total
  • Share value = Total ÷ (sum of ratio parts)

Key Definitions

Term

Partitive Proportion

Example

Divide ₱600 in ratio 2:3:4

Definition

Dividing a total into parts following a given ratio

Term

Share Value

Example

If total is 90 and ratio is 2:3:4, one share = 10

Definition

Value of one unit in the ratio

Diagrams To Know

  • Visual representation of parts as segments
  • Step-by-step partitive proportion solution flow

Formulas

Formula

Percentage = (Part/Whole) × 100%

Meaning

Convert fraction to percentage by multiplying by 100

Watch Out

Don't forget to multiply by 100, not just convert decimal

When To Use

When converting fractions or decimals to percentages

Formula

x% = x/100 = x:100

Meaning

Any percentage can be written as fraction or ratio with denominator 100

Watch Out

25% means 25 out of 100, not 25 out of 1

When To Use

When converting percentage problems to proportion problems

Common Values

Value

50% = 1/2, 25% = 1/4, 75% = 3/4

Symbol

%

Quantity

Common Percentages

Value

10% = 0.1, 1% = 0.01

Quantity

Decimal Equivalents

Section Title

Percentage as Ratios

Important Facts

  • Every percent problem is a proportion problem in disguise
  • Percent means 'per hundred' or 'out of 100'
  • Convert percentages to fractions for easier calculation
  • 100% = whole quantity, 50% = half, 25% = quarter

Key Definitions

Term

Percentage

Example

25% = 25:100 = 1:4

Definition

Ratio with second term as 100

Term

Percent Change

Example

From 80 to 100 is 25% increase

Definition

Percentage increase or decrease from original value

Diagrams To Know

  • Percentage circle or bar representation
  • Before and after comparison for percent change

Must Remember

  • Cross-multiply rule: if a/b = c/d, then a×d = b×c
  • Direct proportion: y = kx (same direction change)
  • Inverse proportion: xy = k (opposite direction change)
  • Partitive proportion: Total ÷ Sum of parts = One share value
  • Always simplify ratios to lowest terms using GCD
  • Percentages are ratios with 100 as denominator
  • Check answers by substituting back into original problem
  • Order matters in ratios: 3:5 ≠ 5:3
  • For continued ratios, add ALL parts before dividing
  • Convert units to be the same before forming ratios

Last Minute Tips

  • Read the problem twice - identify if it's direct or inverse by asking 'if I double this, what happens to that?'
  • Always check if your answer makes logical sense - more workers should mean less time
  • Look for key words: 'varies directly' = direct proportion, 'inversely proportional' = inverse
  • In partitive proportion problems, verify all parts add up to the given total
  • Convert all percentages to fractions immediately - it makes calculations easier

Comparison Tables

Rows

Values

  • Both increase/decrease together
  • One increases, other decreases

Property

Relationship

Values

  • y = kx
  • xy = k

Property

Formula

Values

  • Straight line through origin
  • Hyperbola

Property

Graph Shape

Values

  • Cost and quantity
  • Workers and time

Property

Example

Values

  • Double x, y also doubles
  • Double x, y becomes half

Property

Test Method

Columns

  • Aspect
  • Direct Proportion
  • Inverse Proportion

Table Title

Direct vs Inverse Proportion

Rows

Values

  • 3:5
  • Most common in word problems

Property

Colon notation

Values

  • 3/5
  • When doing calculations

Property

Fraction form

Values

  • 3 to 5
  • In written explanations

Property

Word form

Columns

  • Method
  • Example
  • When to Use

Table Title

Ratio Writing Methods

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