7.RP.A.3 · Percent Change and Multistep Problems

Percent Change, Error, and Multistep Problems

By the end of this lesson you will be able to:

  • Calculate percent increase and percent decrease
  • Compute percent error and interpret it in context
  • Solve multistep problems by chaining percent relationships
Grade 7 — Ratios and Proportional Relationships
7.RP.A.3 · Percent Change and Multistep Problems

What You Will Learn Today

By the end of this lesson, you will be able to:

  1. Compute percent increase and percent decrease using
  2. Calculate percent error as and interpret it
  3. Solve multistep problems by chaining proportional relationships and checking reasonableness
Grade 7 — Ratios and Proportional Relationships
7.RP.A.3 · Percent Change and Multistep Problems

Does Equal Up and Down Cancel Out?

An item costs $200.

  • After a 20% increase:
  • After a 20% decrease:

Final price: $192 — not $200! ⚠️

The second percent applies to a different base than the first.

Grade 7 — Ratios and Proportional Relationships
7.RP.A.3 · Percent Change and Multistep Problems

The Percent Change Formula Explained

  • Positive result → percent increase
  • Negative result → percent decrease
  • The denominator is always the original (before) value

"Percent of WHAT?" → percent of the ORIGINAL

Grade 7 — Ratios and Proportional Relationships
7.RP.A.3 · Percent Change and Multistep Problems

Worked Example: Computing Percent Increase

A store's weekly sales rose from $4,000 to $4,600. What is the percent increase?

Base = $4,000 (the original sales) — not $4,600

Grade 7 — Ratios and Proportional Relationships
7.RP.A.3 · Percent Change and Multistep Problems

Worked Example: Computing Percent Decrease

A $250 coat is marked down to $190. What is the percent decrease?

The sale price is 24% less than the original — base is $250

Grade 7 — Ratios and Proportional Relationships
7.RP.A.3 · Percent Change and Multistep Problems

Check: Percent Increase From 80 to 92

A student's score improved from 80 to 92. What is the percent increase?

What is the correct base for this calculation?

Compute the percent increase.

Grade 7 — Ratios and Proportional Relationships
7.RP.A.3 · Percent Change and Multistep Problems

Answer: The Score Increased by Fifteen Percent

Using 92 as the base gives incorrect ❌

Grade 7 — Ratios and Proportional Relationships
7.RP.A.3 · Percent Change and Multistep Problems

Worked Example: Finding the New Value

A town's population of 3,200 increases by 12.5%. What is the new population?

Grade 7 — Ratios and Proportional Relationships
7.RP.A.3 · Percent Change and Multistep Problems

Chain of Changes: The Trap

Bar diagram showing $200 → $220 (+10%) → $198 (−10% of $220), not back to $200

$200 item: +10% then −10%

Grade 7 — Ratios and Proportional Relationships
7.RP.A.3 · Percent Change and Multistep Problems

The Percent Error Formula Explained

  • Numerator: absolute value of the difference (always positive)
  • Denominator: the actual (true) value — not the measured value
  • Use when comparing a measurement or estimate to a known true value
Grade 7 — Ratios and Proportional Relationships
7.RP.A.3 · Percent Change and Multistep Problems

Worked Example: Percent Error (Length)

A student measures a room as 28 ft. The actual length is 30 ft.

Denominator = 30 (actual) — if you use 28 (measured), the formula is wrong ❌

Grade 7 — Ratios and Proportional Relationships
7.RP.A.3 · Percent Change and Multistep Problems

Worked Example: Percent Error (Density)

A lab measures a liquid's density as 0.95 g/mL. Actual density is 1.00 g/mL.

5% error is moderate — in many science contexts, under 5% is "acceptable"

Grade 7 — Ratios and Proportional Relationships
7.RP.A.3 · Percent Change and Multistep Problems

Check: Percent Change or Percent Error?

Classify each — which formula applies?

  1. Population: 5,000 → 5,750 over a decade
  2. Thermometer: reads 99.2°F; actual temperature is 98.6°F
  3. Stock price: $80 → $64 this year
  4. Building estimate: 45 m; actual height is 48 m
Grade 7 — Ratios and Proportional Relationships
7.RP.A.3 · Percent Change and Multistep Problems

Answer: Classifying Percent Change vs. Error

# Formula
1. Population Percent change
2. Thermometer Percent error
3. Stock price Percent change
4. Building estimate Percent error

Change: quantity shifted over time. Error: measurement vs. truth.

Grade 7 — Ratios and Proportional Relationships
7.RP.A.3 · Percent Change and Multistep Problems

Transition: All the Pieces Together

You now have the complete toolkit:

  • Tax, tip, markup, markdown, commission (Deck 1)
  • Simple interest: (Deck 1)
  • Percent increase and decrease
  • Chain of percent changes
  • Percent error

Now we use all of them in the same problem.

Grade 7 — Ratios and Proportional Relationships
7.RP.A.3 · Percent Change and Multistep Problems

A Framework for Solving Multistep Problems

Three-box flowchart: Estimate → Compute step by step → Verify reasonableness

Before computing: Estimate — "About how much should the answer be?"

During: Identify and compute each percent step in sequence

After: Verify — "Does this answer make sense given my estimate?"

Grade 7 — Ratios and Proportional Relationships
7.RP.A.3 · Percent Change and Multistep Problems

Worked Example: Restaurant Multistep Problem

Wholesale $4.00 · Markup 300% · Tax 8% · Tip 15%

  • Menu:
  • Post-tax:
  • Tip:
  • Total: (estimate ~$20 ✓)
Grade 7 — Ratios and Proportional Relationships
7.RP.A.3 · Percent Change and Multistep Problems

Worked Example: Salary and Interest

Salary $48,000 · Raise 6% · Deposit raise amount · Interest 3% for 4 years

Step 1: Raise /year

Step 2:

Step 1 base = salary | Step 2 base = raise amount

Grade 7 — Ratios and Proportional Relationships
7.RP.A.3 · Percent Change and Multistep Problems

Check: Find the Original Price

After a 35% discount, a jacket costs $91. What was the original price?

Identify: What does $91 represent in terms of the original price?

Set up and solve.

Grade 7 — Ratios and Proportional Relationships
7.RP.A.3 · Percent Change and Multistep Problems

Answer: Original Price Was $140

Check:

Grade 7 — Ratios and Proportional Relationships
7.RP.A.3 · Percent Change and Multistep Problems

Guided Practice: Markup Then Discount

A store marks up its wholesale cost by 80%, then puts the item on sale for 30% off the marked-up price.

What is the actual percent change over the wholesale cost?

Hint:

Grade 7 — Ratios and Proportional Relationships
7.RP.A.3 · Percent Change and Multistep Problems

Summary: Percent Change, Error, and Multistep

  • Change = — base is original
  • New value: original | chain uses a different base each step
  • Error = — base is actual

⚠️ Wrong base | chained ≠ additive | measured ≠ denominator

Grade 7 — Ratios and Proportional Relationships
7.RP.A.3 · Percent Change and Multistep Problems

Connections Across the Proportional Reasoning Unit

  • 7.RP.A.1 — unit rates: the rate in every percent formula is a unit rate
  • 7.RP.A.2 — proportional relationships: part whole, = percent rate
  • 7.RP.A.3 — apply proportional reasoning to all real-world percent contexts

Coming next: ratios in scale drawings and geometric applications

Grade 7 — Ratios and Proportional Relationships

Click to begin the narrated lesson

Use proportional relationships to solve multistep ratio and percent problems