This question tests your ability to apply direct proportion using decimal measurements.
Keep decimal calculations exact and avoid rounding until the final step.
At Higher GCSE level, direct proportion questions often involve measurements given as decimals rather than whole numbers. These problems test whether you can apply proportional reasoning accurately while handling decimal arithmetic with confidence. The key idea remains the same: when two quantities are directly proportional, one quantity increases or decreases at a constant rate with the other.
In measurement-based contexts such as rope, fabric, cable, or piping, direct proportion means that the cost depends entirely on the length required. If the price per metre stays the same, doubling the length will double the cost, and increasing the length by any factor will increase the cost by the same factor.
The most reliable approach for Higher-tier questions is to calculate the unit rate. The unit rate is the value for one unit of measurement, such as the cost per metre. Once this value is known, it can be scaled up to find the cost for any required length.
Example: Suppose 2.4 m of fabric costs £6.00. Dividing £6.00 by 2.4 gives a unit cost of £2.50 per metre. If 3.6 m of fabric is needed, multiplying £2.50 by 3.6 gives the total cost.
Decimal values increase the risk of calculation errors, especially when dividing. Writing each step clearly helps prevent mistakes such as misplacing decimal points or rounding too early. A quick estimate can act as a useful sense check. If a little over 3 m costs just under £5, then 5 m should cost more than £5 but not an unrealistic amount.
Example: If 1.6 m of wire costs £4.80, the unit cost is £3.00 per metre. Buying 5 m should cost around £15, which confirms whether the calculation is sensible.
In some situations, scaling by fractions can be quicker than finding the unit rate. This works best when the required length is a simple multiple or fraction of the original length.
Example: If 4 m of wood costs £12, then 2 m (half the length) would cost half as much. This method relies on recognising proportional relationships accurately.
Always ask whether the final value makes sense given the size of the measurement.
This type of proportional reasoning is widely used in real life. Builders calculate material costs, shops price goods by weight or length, and engineers measure cables and piping precisely. Being confident with direct proportion helps ensure accurate budgeting and planning.
Should I always find the unit rate?
For Higher-tier questions involving decimals, the unit rate method is usually the safest.
Why are decimal measurements common at Higher tier?
They test accuracy, reasoning, and confidence with non-integer values.
Keep all decimal values exact until the final step and only round if the question asks you to. Clear working improves accuracy and helps secure method marks.
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