Albie is comparing the ratio of students in her class that are wearing the color green to the total number of students in her class. She finds out of 30 students in her class, 7 are wearing green. What kind of ratio relationship is she using?(1 point)

Albie is using a part-to-whole ratio relationship.

Niko has a jar of candy containing strawberry, butterscotch, and root beer flavors. If there are 10 strawberry, 13 butterscotch, and 7 root beer candies, which ratio shows the quantity of the strawberry-flavored candy to the total number of candies Niko owns?(1 point)

The ratio that shows the quantity of strawberry-flavored candy to the total number of candies Niko owns is 10:30.

Albie is using a part-to-whole ratio relationship.

Albie is comparing the ratio of students wearing green to the total number of students in her class. To determine the kind of ratio relationship she is using, we need to understand what the ratio represents.

In this case, the ratio is the number of students wearing green (7) compared to the total number of students in her class (30). The ratio can be expressed as 7:30 or simplified to 7/30.

Since the ratio is comparing two different quantities, we can conclude that Albie is using a part-to-whole ratio relationship. In other words, she is comparing a part (students wearing green) to the whole (total number of students in her class).