Math Antics - Calculating Percent Change - Free Educational videos for Students in K-12 | Lumos Learning

Math Antics - Calculating Percent Change - Free Educational videos for Students in k-12


Math Antics - Calculating Percent Change - By Mathantics



Transcript
00:0-1 So with the customer acquisition cost of 35 and awaited
00:02 sales pipeline of 1.2 and a monthly recurring revenue of
00:06 2.4 million , we had net sales go from 4.9
00:09 million . A pr to approximately 5.1 million per capita
00:14 . But what about the percent change ? Ah yes
00:17 , percent change . It's always good to know percent
00:20 change . I'll explain that all to you right now
00:24 . It's oh sorry , I'm kidding a phone call
00:26 . I got to take this but then I'll explain
00:28 all that percent change to you . Oh , oh
00:36 hi , I'm rob . Welcome to math antics .
00:39 In this lesson . We're going to learn how to
00:41 calculate percent increase and decrease . Known collectively as percent
00:45 change . If you're not very familiar with Percents ,
00:48 I'd highly recommend watching some of our other videos about
00:50 them before continuing on Lots of times when you have
00:54 a change in value , you just say how much
00:56 something goes up or down in absolute terms like the
00:59 population of this city increased by 1000 people , or
01:02 the cost of the shirt decreased by $15 . But
01:06 you can also express those sorts of changes in relative
01:08 terms using percentages . Unlike an absolute change , a
01:12 percent change always relates the amount of change to the
01:16 number 100 . The term literally means per 100 So
01:21 change means per 100 change or the change per 100
01:26 . So let's start by imagining that you have 100
01:28 of something like 100 bucks . Oh yeah If you
01:32 start out with 100 but then you get 20 more
01:35 , that would be a 20 increase because the amount
01:37 went up by 20 per the original 100 . Likewise
01:41 , if you start out with exactly 100 bucks ,
01:43 but then you lose 15 , that would be a
01:45 15 decrease because it went down by 15 per the
01:49 original 100 . So as you can see , it's
01:52 pretty easy to figure out the change when the original
01:54 amount is exactly 100 . But you don't have to
01:57 start with 100 to express change as a percentage .
02:00 Almost any original value and any amount of change can
02:03 be represented as a percent change thanks to equivalent fractions
02:07 . For example , instead of $100 , suppose that
02:10 you start out with $750 , then imagine that you
02:14 get $150 more . What percent increases that ? To
02:18 figure that out ? Let's use a simple diagram .
02:21 This blue bar represents the original $750 And this green
02:25 bar represents the $150 increase . Now let's use our
02:29 imagination and ask what if that original amount was only
02:33 $100 , what would the equivalent change in value B
02:37 . Basically we're asking if you had the fraction 150
02:41 over 750 , what would an equivalent fraction b .
02:45 That has 100 as the bottom number ? Put another
02:48 way if you have 750 and get 150 more it's
02:52 equivalent to having 100 and getting X more . We're
02:57 using the letter X to temporarily represent the missing value
03:00 . The top number of the original fraction is the
03:03 absolute change and the top number of the equivalent fraction
03:06 which is currently missing is the percent change . So
03:10 let's figure out what the missing value is in two
03:12 different ways . First visually using our diagram and second
03:16 using simple arithmetic . By definition , if you divide
03:20 any amount up into 10 equal parts , then each
03:23 one of those parts will be 10 of the original
03:26 amount . So if you divided the original $750 up
03:31 into 10 equal amounts , each of those amounts would
03:33 be $75 . That means that a $75 increase would
03:38 be equivalent to a 10 increase . of course we
03:42 had an increase of $150 not 75 , 150 is
03:47 exactly 75 plus 75 . So that would be another
03:50 10 of the original amount . As you can see
03:53 from the Diagram , if you start with 750 and
03:57 then you get 150 more , that's equivalent to starting
04:00 with 100 and getting 20 more . In other words
04:04 , it's a 20 increase . Now let's see how
04:07 we could get that same answer without using the diagram
04:10 Using a little basic algebra . We can solve for
04:12 the unknown value X . All we need to do
04:15 is multiply both sides of the equation by 100 .
04:18 Doing that gives us X all by itself on this
04:21 side of the equation , because the 100 over 100
04:24 cancels out . And on the other side we have
04:26 the change in value 150 divided by the original value
04:31 750 . All Times 100 . Using a calculator .
04:35 150 , divided by 750 equals 0.2 And 0.2 times
04:41 100 equals 20 or 20% , which is the exact
04:45 same answer we got from our diagram . So the
04:48 formula for calculating percent change is simple . All you
04:51 have to do is take the absolute change or how
04:53 much the amount has increased or decreased and divide that
04:57 by the original amount and then multiply the result by
05:00 100 . This formula may look even more intuitive to
05:03 you . If we put it back in the equivalent
05:05 fraction form these are just two different ways of writing
05:08 the exact same relationship . Now that we have a
05:11 formula for calculating percent change . Let's try using it
05:14 in a couple quick examples . Suppose a doggy daycare
05:18 takes care of 25 dogs on friday , but on
05:20 saturday three more dogs joined the group . What percent
05:23 increases that ? Well , the original amount of dogs
05:27 is 25 and the change in dogs is plus three
05:30 . According to our formula . We just need to
05:32 divide the change by the original and multiply it by
05:35 100 to get the change . Using a calculator ,
05:39 we get three divided by 25 equals 0.12 and then
05:43 0.12 times 100 equals 12 . That means the number
05:47 of dogs at the daycare increased by 12 from Friday
05:51 to Saturday . That was pretty easy . But what
05:54 about this example suppose you want to buy a pair
05:56 of shoes that cost $65 but you have a discount
05:59 coupon that will reduce the price by $15 . What
06:03 would the percent decrease in price be if you use
06:05 your coupon ? Well the original price is 65 and
06:09 the change in price will be negative 15 . It's
06:12 negative because it's a decrease . So let's plug those
06:15 numbers into our formula that gives us percent change equals
06:20 negative 15 divided by 65 times 100 . Again using
06:25 a calculator negative 15 , divided by 65 equals negative
06:29 0.23 rounded off to two decimal places and negative 0.23
06:35 times 100 equals negative 23 . So the coupon will
06:39 decrease the price of the shoes by 23% . Okay
06:44 , so if you're given an original amount and told
06:46 how much that amount changes , it's really easy to
06:49 calculate the percent change using this simple formula . But
06:53 sometimes math problems don't tell you what the absolute change
06:56 in value is . Instead they just give you an
06:59 original value and a new value . In that case
07:02 you need to calculate the change yourself . Here's how
07:04 you do that . Suppose you're given a problem that
07:07 says last year your school had 420 students but this
07:11 year it has 441 students . What's the % change
07:15 in student population ? This problem doesn't directly say what
07:19 the absolute change in student population was . It just
07:22 tells us what the value was originally and what it
07:24 is . Now we know that there was a change
07:27 because of the difference in the numbers and in math
07:30 what does the word difference make you think of ?
07:32 Yep subtraction . We can figure out the absolute change
07:36 just by subtracting but order matters in subtraction . So
07:40 should we subtract the original amount from the new amount
07:43 ? Or the new amount from the original amount ?
07:45 Well the standard way of doing it is to start
07:48 with the new amount and subtract the original amount from
07:51 it . If the new amount is bigger than the
07:53 original the answer you get will be a positive number
07:55 which means that you have a percent increase . But
07:58 if the new amount is smaller than the original the
08:01 answer you get will be a negative number which means
08:03 you have a percent decrease . So if we do
08:06 that we have 441 -420 which is positive 21 .
08:11 So we have an increase of 21 students Positive 21
08:16 divided by the original amount 420 equals positive 0.05 and
08:21 0.05 times 100 equals five . Since that's positive ,
08:26 we have a five increase in students . But what
08:30 if you subtracted in the wrong order and got negative
08:32 21 instead ? If you plug that into the formula
08:35 for percent change , you'll get negative 21 divided by
08:38 420 which equals negative 0.5 And then multiplying by 100
08:43 gives you negative five , which suggests a five decrease
08:47 because the sign is negative . But since you're paying
08:51 attention , you'll realize that you couldn't possibly have a
08:53 five decrease in students since the number got bigger over
08:57 time . The problem tells us that it was 420
09:00 last year and this year it's 441 . So you
09:03 must really have a five increase . The point here
09:08 is that in math it's always important to use your
09:11 intuition and ask yourself if an answer makes sense .
09:14 Rather than simply trying to memorize the formula without thinking
09:17 about what it really means . And speaking of intuition
09:20 before we wrap up , I want to explore just
09:23 a few more situations that will hopefully give you a
09:25 better intuition about percent increase and decrease first . Let's
09:30 consider the case where you start with one of something
09:32 and end up with two . What would the percent
09:34 increase be ? Well , the original amount is one
09:37 and the change is also one . Plugging those numbers
09:40 into the formula gives 1/1 times 100 which simplifies to
09:45 100 . So the percent increase is 100% . That
09:49 may seem kind of odd . But it makes total
09:51 sense if you think about it , if you have
09:53 one and then you get one more , you're gaining
09:56 100% of what you started with and that's true .
09:59 Any time the original amount adults If you start with
10:02 two and get two more for a total of four
10:05 that increases 100% . Because two divided by two times
10:09 100 is 100 . And if you start with five
10:12 and then get five more for a total of 10
10:15 that increases 100 because five divided by five times 100
10:19 is also 100 . So any time the original amount
10:22 you have doubles it's an increase of 100% . But
10:27 what if you start with two and then end up
10:28 with one Considering what we just learned . You might
10:32 be tempted to think that that's a decrease of 100%
10:35 . But if we use our formula we'll see that
10:37 . That's not the case . Since the original amount
10:40 is too we put a two on the bottom of
10:42 the fraction and the changes negative one since we decreased
10:45 from 2-1 . So a negative one goes up on
10:48 top . Now if we simplify we get negative one
10:52 divided by two which is negative 0.5 and negative 0.5
10:56 times 100 is negative 50 or a 50 decrease the
11:01 reason that the percent changes are different in these two
11:04 cases doubling the amount versus cutting it in half .
11:07 Is that the percent change always compares the change to
11:10 the original amounts which are different in these two cases
11:13 . Finally , let's determine what the percent increase would
11:17 be if you start with one and end up with
11:19 three and conversely , what would the percent decrease be
11:22 if you start with three and end up with one
11:25 . In the first case the changes positive two and
11:27 in the second case it's negative too . Let's plug
11:30 those values into our Formula four change along with the
11:33 original values in each case and see what answers we
11:36 get going from 1 to 3 positive two divided by
11:40 one times 100 equals 200 or a 200% increase and
11:46 going from 3 to 1 -2 divided by three times
11:50 100 equals negative 67 rounded to the nearest whole number
11:54 or a 67 decrease again , even though the magnitude
11:59 of the change was the same . The percent changes
12:01 are different because we started out with different original amounts
12:05 . And this example also shows that you can get
12:07 a percent change that's greater than 100% . All right
12:12 . So now you know what percent changes and how
12:14 to calculate it . The formula for calculating it is
12:17 pretty simple . So you should be able to remember
12:19 it after you've used it on several problems and that's
12:22 the key to learning math . You can't just watch
12:24 videos about it . You need to actually use it
12:26 to solve problems so be sure to practice what you've
12:29 learned in this video as always . Thanks for watching
12:31 math antics and I'll see you next time . Ah
12:35 Yes , percent change . So percent change in this
12:37 case Is negative 1000% . So I guess you're all
12:42 fired . That's what my calculator says . Learn more
12:47 at Math Antics dot com .
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