Example: Percent Increase
Problem: A video game price rose from $40 to $50. What is the percent increase?
- Find Change:
- Divide by Original:
- Convert to %:
Answer: 25% Increase
Example: Percent Decrease
Problem: A phone battery dropped from 80% to 60%. What is the percent decrease?
- Find Change:
(percent points) - Divide by Original:
- Convert to %:
Answer: 25% Decrease
Practice: Calculate the Change
Find the percent change. Round to the nearest percent.
- From 20 to 30
- From 50 to 40
- From 200 to 250
Pause and solve.
Answers
- 20 to 30: Change = 10.
- 50 to 40: Change = 10.
- 200 to 250: Change = 50.
Concept 2: Finding New Amounts
How do we find the new price after a percent change?
Method A: Two Steps
- Calculate the change amount.
- Add to (or subtract from) the original.
Method B: One Step (Multipliers)
Multiply by
Understanding Multipliers
- 20% Increase:
. Multiply by 1.20. - 20% Decrease:
. Multiply by 0.80.
Example: Using Multipliers
Increase: A $80 jacket is marked up 15%.
- Multiplier:
- New Price:
Decrease: A $80 jacket is 15% off.
- Multiplier:
- New Price:
Practice: Finding New Amounts
Use multipliers to find the new value.
- Increase 40 by 10%
- Decrease 40 by 10%
- Increase 200 by 5%
Pause and solve.
Answers
-
Increase 40 by 10%:
- Multiplier: 1.10
-
Decrease 40 by 10%:
- Multiplier: 0.90
-
Increase 200 by 5%:
- Multiplier: 1.05
Concept 3: Working Backwards
Finding the Original Amount when you know the New Amount.
Key Idea:
So using inverse operations:
Example: Working Backwards
Problem: After a 20% discount, a shirt costs $32. What was the original price?
- Determine Multiplier: 20% discount means we pay 80%.
- Multiplier = 0.80
- Set up Equation: Original
0.80 = 32 - Solve: Original =
Check:
Misconception Alert: Reversibility
Does a +10% increase followed by a -10% decrease bring you back to the start?
NO! Because the "original" changes for the second step.
Concept 4: Percent Error 3
Percent error tells us how accurate a measurement is.
Example: Percent Error
Problem: You estimated a crowd of 200 people. The actual count was 250.
- Difference:
- Divide by Actual:
- Convert:
Answer: 20% Error
Summary: Key Takeaways
- Percent Change:
- Multipliers:
- Increase:
(e.g., 1.25) - Decrease:
(e.g., 0.75)
- Increase:
- Working Backwards: Divide the new amount by the multiplier.
- Trap: Percents don't simply add or subtract across steps (
).
Next Steps
You've mastered the basics of Percent Change!
Practice:
- Complete the worksheet problems.
- Try the "Percent Change Detective" activity with real news headlines.
Coming Up:
- Simple Interest
- Tax, Tips, and Markups in depth