Formula Sheets

Calculating Percentage Increase for K-12 Students

Percentage increase tells us how much a value has grown compared to its original size. It's expressed as a percentage (%) of the original value.

Calculating Percentage Increase for K-12 Students

Introduction to Percentage Increase

Percentage increase tells us how much a value has grown compared to its original size. It's expressed as a percentage (%) of the original value. Understanding percentage increase helps us analyze changes in prices, population growth, test scores, and many other real-world situations.

Elementary School Level (K-5)

Understanding Percentages

A percentage is a way to express a number as a fraction of 100:

\(50\% = \frac{50}{100} = 0.5\)

\(25\% = \frac{25}{100} = 0.25\)

\(100\% = \frac{100}{100} = 1\)

Basic Percentage Increase

To find a percentage increase, we need to:

  1. Find the amount of increase
  2. Divide the increase by the original value
  3. Multiply by 100 to get the percentage

Percentage Increase = \(\frac{\text{Increase}}{\text{Original Value}} \times 100\%\)

Increase = New Value - Original Value

Example:

If a toy's price changes from $20 to $25, what is the percentage increase?

Step 1: Find the increase

Increase = $25 - $20 = $5

Step 2: Divide by the original value

\(\frac{\text{Increase}}{\text{Original Value}} = \frac{5}{20} = 0.25\)

Step 3: Multiply by 100 to get percentage

Percentage Increase = 0.25 × 100% = 25%

The price increased by 25%.

Visual Understanding

Let's visualize percentage increases:

Original: $10

50% increase: $15

100% increase: $20

A 100% increase means the new value is double the original value!

Real-Life Examples

Test Scores

Sally scored 20 points on her first test and 30 points on her second test.

Increase: 30 - 20 = 10 points

Percentage Increase: (10 ÷ 20) × 100% = 50%

Plant Growth

A plant was 5 inches tall last week and is now 7 inches tall.

Increase: 7 - 5 = 2 inches

Percentage Increase: (2 ÷ 5) × 100% = 40%

Middle School Level (6-8)

Combined Formula

We can combine the steps into a single formula:

\(\text{Percentage Increase} = \frac{\text{New Value} - \text{Original Value}}{\text{Original Value}} \times 100\%\)

Example:

The population of a town increased from 15,000 to 18,000 people. Calculate the percentage increase.

Using the formula:

\(\text{Percentage Increase} = \frac{18,000 - 15,000}{15,000} \times 100\%\)

\(\text{Percentage Increase} = \frac{3,000}{15,000} \times 100\%\)

\(\text{Percentage Increase} = 0.2 \times 100\%\)

\(\text{Percentage Increase} = 20\%\)

The town's population increased by 20%.

Decimal Multiplier Method

Another way to calculate percentage increase is to use a decimal multiplier:

\(\text{New Value} = \text{Original Value} \times (1 + \frac{\text{Percentage Increase}}{100})\)

Example:

A shirt that costs $40 increases in price by 25%. What is the new price?

New Price = $40 × (1 + 25/100)

New Price = $40 × 1.25

New Price = $50

The new price of the shirt is $50.

We can also rearrange this formula to find the percentage increase:

\(\text{Percentage Increase} = (\frac{\text{New Value}}{\text{Original Value}} - 1) \times 100\%\)

Finding Original Value

Sometimes we know the new value and the percentage increase but need to find the original value:

\(\text{Original Value} = \frac{\text{New Value}}{1 + \frac{\text{Percentage Increase}}{100}}\)

Example:

After a 30% increase, the price of a book is $39. What was the original price?

Original Price = $39 ÷ (1 + 30/100)

Original Price = $39 ÷ 1.3

Original Price = $30

The original price of the book was $30.

Multiple Increases

When there are multiple percentage increases, we apply them one after the other:

Example:

A phone costs $400. Its price increases by 10% in January and then by another 15% in February. What is the final price?

First increase (January):

New Price = $400 × (1 + 10/100) = $400 × 1.1 = $440

Second increase (February):

Final Price = $440 × (1 + 15/100) = $440 × 1.15 = $506

The final price is $506.

Note: This is not the same as a single increase of 25%!

$400 × (1 + 25/100) = $400 × 1.25 = $500

Combined multiple increases:

\(\text{Final Value} = \text{Original Value} \times (1 + \frac{r_1}{100}) \times (1 + \frac{r_2}{100}) \times ... \times (1 + \frac{r_n}{100})\)

Where \(r_1, r_2, ..., r_n\) are the successive percentage increases.

High School Level (9-12)

Compound Percentage Increase

When the same percentage increase occurs repeatedly (such as annually), we can use the compound growth formula:

\(A = P(1 + \frac{r}{100})^n\)

Where:

  • \(A\) = final amount
  • \(P\) = principal (original amount)
  • \(r\) = percentage increase per period (as a number)
  • \(n\) = number of periods

Example:

A city's population of 50,000 increases by 2% annually. What will the population be after 5 years?

Using the compound formula:

\(A = 50,000 \times (1 + \frac{2}{100})^5\)

\(A = 50,000 \times (1.02)^5\)

\(A = 50,000 \times 1.1041\)

\(A = 55,205\)

The city's population will be approximately 55,205 after 5 years.

Finding the Rate of Increase

When we know the original and final values over a certain period, we can find the average rate of increase:

\(r = \left(\left(\frac{A}{P}\right)^{\frac{1}{n}} - 1\right) \times 100\%\)

Example:

A house value increased from $200,000 to $250,000 over 5 years. What was the average annual percentage increase?

\(r = \left(\left(\frac{250,000}{200,000}\right)^{\frac{1}{5}} - 1\right) \times 100\%\)

\(r = \left((1.25)^{0.2} - 1\right) \times 100\%\)

\(r = \left(1.0456 - 1\right) \times 100\%\)

\(r = 0.0456 \times 100\%\)

\(r = 4.56\%\)

The average annual percentage increase was approximately 4.56%.

Effective Annual Rate

When percentage increases occur more frequently than once per year, we can calculate the effective annual rate:

\(\text{EAR} = \left(1 + \frac{r}{100 \times m}\right)^m - 1\)

Where:

  • \(\text{EAR}\) = effective annual rate (as a decimal)
  • \(r\) = nominal annual percentage increase
  • \(m\) = number of compounding periods per year

Example:

If an investment grows at a rate of 8% per year, compounded quarterly, what is the effective annual rate?

\(\text{EAR} = \left(1 + \frac{8}{100 \times 4}\right)^4 - 1\)

\(\text{EAR} = (1 + 0.02)^4 - 1\)

\(\text{EAR} = 1.0824 - 1\)

\(\text{EAR} = 0.0824 = 8.24\%\)

The effective annual rate is 8.24%.

Continuous Compounding

When the number of compounding periods approaches infinity, we get continuous compounding:

\(A = Pe^{rt}\)

Where:

  • \(A\) = final amount
  • \(P\) = principal (original amount)
  • \(r\) = rate (as a decimal)
  • \(t\) = time in years
  • \(e\) = Euler's number (approximately 2.71828)

Example:

If $5,000 is invested at 6% annual interest, compounded continuously, how much will it be worth after 10 years?

\(A = 5,000 \times e^{0.06 \times 10}\)

\(A = 5,000 \times e^{0.6}\)

\(A = 5,000 \times 1.8221\)

\(A \approx 9,110.50\)

The investment will be worth approximately $9,110.50 after 10 years.

Real-World Applications

Financial Investments

Calculating how investments grow over time with different interest rates and compounding periods.

Example: $10,000 invested at 7% annually for 30 years grows to $76,122.55.

Population Growth

Modeling how populations of cities, countries, or species increase over time.

Example: With a 1.2% annual growth rate, a population doubles in approximately 58 years.

Inflation Analysis

Understanding how prices increase over time and how it affects purchasing power.

Example: With 3% annual inflation, $100 today will have the purchasing power of only $74.19 in 10 years.

Advanced Problem: The Rule of 72

The Rule of 72 is a handy approximation to estimate how long it takes for a value to double, given a fixed annual percentage increase:

\(\text{Years to double} \approx \frac{72}{\text{Annual Percentage Increase}}\)

Example:

If your money grows at 8% per year, approximately how long will it take to double?

Years to double ≈ 72 ÷ 8 = 9 years

Let's verify this with the exact formula:

Using \(A = P(1 + \frac{r}{100})^n\) and setting \(A = 2P\):

\(2P = P(1 + \frac{8}{100})^n\)

\(2 = (1.08)^n\)

\(\log(2) = n \times \log(1.08)\)

\(n = \frac{\log(2)}{\log(1.08)} = \frac{0.301}{0.0334} \approx 9.01\)

It would take about 9.01 years, so the Rule of 72 gives a very close approximation!

Mathematical Derivation:

The Rule of 72 comes from the approximation that \(\ln(2) \approx 0.693\), and when we use the natural logarithm to solve the doubling time equation:

\(T = \frac{\ln(2)}{\ln(1+r)} \approx \frac{0.693}{r}\) (for small values of r)

Multiplying by 100 (to use the percentage instead of the decimal), we get approximately 70, which is rounded to 72 for easier mental calculations with common interest rates.

Summary of Percentage Increase Formulas

Basic Formula

\(\text{Percentage Increase} = \frac{\text{New} - \text{Original}}{\text{Original}} \times 100\%\)

Finding New Value

\(\text{New Value} = \text{Original} \times (1 + \frac{r}{100})\)

Compound Growth

\(A = P(1 + \frac{r}{100})^n\)

Important Note for Students

Remember these key points about percentage increases:

  • Always calculate the percentage increase based on the original value, not the new value.
  • A 100% increase means the value has doubled (becomes twice as large).
  • Multiple percentage increases are not simply added together - they compound.
  • When solving problems, clearly identify the original value and the new value before calculating.
  • The Rule of 72 provides a quick mental estimate for doubling time.
  • In real-world situations, consider whether simple or compound growth is more appropriate.

© Calculating Percentage Increase for K-12 Students

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