Learn on PengienVision, Mathematics, Grade 6Chapter 6: Understand and Use Percent

Lesson 5: 6-5 Find the Percent of a Number

In this Grade 6 enVision Mathematics lesson from Chapter 6, students learn how to find the percent of a number by converting percents to their decimal or fraction form and writing percent equations to solve for the part, the whole, or the percent. Using double number line diagrams and multiplication, students practice solving real-world problems such as calculating sale prices and determining quantities from circle graphs. The lesson builds fluency with percent equations and estimation strategies to check whether answers are reasonable.

Section 1

Calculating a percent of a number

Property

To calculate a percent of a number:

  1. Change the percent to a decimal fraction.
  2. Multiply the number by the decimal fraction.

To change a percent to a decimal fraction, divide the percent by 100, or move the decimal point two places to the left.

Examples

  • To find 8% of 300, convert 8% to a decimal by moving the decimal point two places left: 8%=0.088\% = 0.08. Then multiply: 0.08×300=240.08 \times 300 = 24.
  • A phone costs 850 dollars and sales tax is 7.5%. Convert 7.5% to a decimal: 0.0750.075. The tax is 0.075×850=63.750.075 \times 850 = 63.75 dollars.
  • Calculate 150% of 60. First, change 150% to a decimal: 1.501.50. Then, multiply: 1.50×60=901.50 \times 60 = 90.

Explanation

To use a percent in a calculation, you must first convert it into a form your calculator understands, like a decimal. Moving the decimal point two places left is a quick shortcut for dividing by 100.

Section 2

Finding what percent a part is

Property

To find what percent a part is of a whole:

  1. Divide the part by the whole to get a decimal fraction:
    partwhole\frac{\text{part}}{\text{whole}}
  2. Multiply the decimal fraction by 100 to convert it to a percent.

Examples

  • You scored 18 points out of a total of 20 on a quiz. To find your percent score, divide the part by the whole: 18÷20=0.9018 \div 20 = 0.90. Multiply by 100 to get the percent: 0.90×100=90%0.90 \times 100 = 90\%.
  • A recipe calls for 400 grams of flour, and you have used 80 grams. The percent used is 80÷400=0.2080 \div 400 = 0.20. This is equivalent to 20%20\%.
  • If you saved 30 dollars on an item that originally cost 150 dollars, you saved 30150=0.2\frac{30}{150} = 0.2. As a percent, this is 0.2×100=20%0.2 \times 100 = 20\%.

Explanation

This process reverses the calculation. By dividing the smaller part by the total whole, you find the fraction it represents. Multiplying by 100 scales that fraction up to a percentage, making it easier to understand.

Book overview

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Chapter 6: Understand and Use Percent

  1. Lesson 1

    Lesson 1: 6-1 Understand Percent

  2. Lesson 2

    Lesson 2: 6-2 Relate Fractions, Decimals, and Percents

  3. Lesson 3

    Lesson 3: 6-3 Represent Percents Greater Than 100 or Less Than 1

  4. Lesson 4

    Lesson 4: 6-4 Estimate to Find Percent

  5. Lesson 5Current

    Lesson 5: 6-5 Find the Percent of a Number

  6. Lesson 6

    Lesson 6: 6-6 Find the Whole Given a Part and the Percent

Lesson overview

Expand to review the lesson summary and core properties.

Expand

Section 1

Calculating a percent of a number

Property

To calculate a percent of a number:

  1. Change the percent to a decimal fraction.
  2. Multiply the number by the decimal fraction.

To change a percent to a decimal fraction, divide the percent by 100, or move the decimal point two places to the left.

Examples

  • To find 8% of 300, convert 8% to a decimal by moving the decimal point two places left: 8%=0.088\% = 0.08. Then multiply: 0.08×300=240.08 \times 300 = 24.
  • A phone costs 850 dollars and sales tax is 7.5%. Convert 7.5% to a decimal: 0.0750.075. The tax is 0.075×850=63.750.075 \times 850 = 63.75 dollars.
  • Calculate 150% of 60. First, change 150% to a decimal: 1.501.50. Then, multiply: 1.50×60=901.50 \times 60 = 90.

Explanation

To use a percent in a calculation, you must first convert it into a form your calculator understands, like a decimal. Moving the decimal point two places left is a quick shortcut for dividing by 100.

Section 2

Finding what percent a part is

Property

To find what percent a part is of a whole:

  1. Divide the part by the whole to get a decimal fraction:
    partwhole\frac{\text{part}}{\text{whole}}
  2. Multiply the decimal fraction by 100 to convert it to a percent.

Examples

  • You scored 18 points out of a total of 20 on a quiz. To find your percent score, divide the part by the whole: 18÷20=0.9018 \div 20 = 0.90. Multiply by 100 to get the percent: 0.90×100=90%0.90 \times 100 = 90\%.
  • A recipe calls for 400 grams of flour, and you have used 80 grams. The percent used is 80÷400=0.2080 \div 400 = 0.20. This is equivalent to 20%20\%.
  • If you saved 30 dollars on an item that originally cost 150 dollars, you saved 30150=0.2\frac{30}{150} = 0.2. As a percent, this is 0.2×100=20%0.2 \times 100 = 20\%.

Explanation

This process reverses the calculation. By dividing the smaller part by the total whole, you find the fraction it represents. Multiplying by 100 scales that fraction up to a percentage, making it easier to understand.

Book overview

Jump across lessons in the current chapter without opening the full course modal.

Continue this chapter

Chapter 6: Understand and Use Percent

  1. Lesson 1

    Lesson 1: 6-1 Understand Percent

  2. Lesson 2

    Lesson 2: 6-2 Relate Fractions, Decimals, and Percents

  3. Lesson 3

    Lesson 3: 6-3 Represent Percents Greater Than 100 or Less Than 1

  4. Lesson 4

    Lesson 4: 6-4 Estimate to Find Percent

  5. Lesson 5Current

    Lesson 5: 6-5 Find the Percent of a Number

  6. Lesson 6

    Lesson 6: 6-6 Find the Whole Given a Part and the Percent