Intermediate

Percentages, Similarity and Growth

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·Edexcel GCSE Mathematics·Pearson Edexcel 1MA1·5 min
R9·R12·R16

Percentages — Increase, Decrease and Original Value (R9)

A percentage is a fraction with denominator 100. The multiplier method is the most efficient way to calculate percentage changes.

Percentage increase: multiply by

Percentage decrease: multiply by

ChangeMultiplier
20% increase
15% decrease
7.5% increase

Worked example — a jacket costs £64. It is reduced by 35%. Find the sale price.

One quantity as a percentage of another:

(15 is 25% of 60)

Original value problems (reverse percentage): divide by the multiplier.

Worked example — after a 20% increase, the price is £96. Find the original price.

Worked example — a population of 8500 is 85% of the original. Find the original.

Simple and Compound Interest (R9)

Simple interest — calculated on the original principal only:

where = principal, = annual rate (%), = time (years).

Worked example — find the simple interest on £500 at 4% per year for 3 years.

. Total = £560. ✓

Compound interest — calculated on the accumulating total each period:

Worked example — find the value of £1000 invested at 3% compound interest for 5 years.

(to the nearest penny) ✓

Comparing: compound interest grows faster than simple interest for year, because the interest earns interest.

Percentage Change and "Percentage Greater Than 100%"

Percentage change:

Worked example — a price rises from £80 to £94. Find the percentage increase.

Percentages over 100%: if one value is more than twice another, the percentage is over 100%.

— the new value is 250% of the original.

A value 150% of the original represents a 50% increase. .

Similarity and Scale Factors (R12)

Similar shapes have the same angles and proportional corresponding sides. The ratio of corresponding lengths is the scale factor .

  • Length scale factor:
  • Area scale factor:
  • Volume scale factor:

Worked example — two similar cylinders. The smaller has height 4 cm and volume 60 cm³. The larger has height 10 cm. Find the larger cylinder's volume.

Scale factor for length:

Volume scale factor:

Larger volume: cm³ ✓

Trigonometric ratios as proportions (R12 underlined): in similar right-angled triangles, the sine, cosine, and tangent ratios are equal regardless of size — they depend only on the angle.

(Extra context — this explains why trig ratios are constants for a given angle rather than depending on the specific triangle's side lengths.)

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Exponential Growth and Decay (R16)

Compound growth/decay applies a percentage multiplier repeatedly over time.

Worked example — population growth:

A town of 12 000 grows at 2.5% per year. Find the population after 10 years.

Worked example — depreciation (decay):

A car worth £18 000 loses 18% of its value each year. Find the value after 4 years.

(Extra context — Higher: iterative processes in R16H link to A20 iteration; a recurrence relation like describes the same depreciation sequence term by term.)

Common Exam Mistakes

1. Percentage decrease — multiplying by the percentage, not the multiplier

A 15% decrease is NOT . The multiplier is . Multiplying by 0.15 gives the decrease itself, not the new value.

2. Reverse percentage — subtracting the percentage from the given value

If £60 is the price after a 20% reduction, the original is NOT . Divide by the multiplier: .

3. Similarity — using length scale factor for areas

If the length scale factor is 3, the area scale factor is . Multiplying the area by 3 instead of 9 is a very common error.

4. Compound interest — applying simple interest formula

Compound interest is recalculated on the new total each period; simple interest uses the original principal throughout. The compound formula does this automatically.

MistakeCorrection
"Original before 25% increase: "Subtracting 25% of the new value is wrong; divide by the multiplier:
"If length scale = 4, area of similar shape = area"Area scale ; new area original area
"3% compound interest on £200 for 2 years: "Compound: ; the simple interest answer is £12 growth but compound interest gives £12.18 growth

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Direct and Inverse Proportion, and Rates of Change

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