This question tests compound fraction skills: you must evaluate two products and then subtract. Use BIDMAS to structure your working, reduce fractions early by cross-cancelling, and present your final answer in simplest form.
Multiply first, then subtract. Cross-cancel within each product to simplify, and check the final fraction is in lowest terms.
At Higher GCSE level, fraction questions often combine several operations. The key is to structure your work using BIDMAS: do the multiplications first, then the subtraction. Only at the end should you simplify or convert forms if needed.
Example 1: \( \left(\tfrac{5}{6}\times\tfrac{3}{4}\right)-\left(\tfrac{1}{3}\times\tfrac{1}{8}\right) \)
Example 2: \( \left(\tfrac{7}{9}\times\tfrac{3}{7}\right)-\left(\tfrac{2}{3}\times\tfrac{1}{9}\right) \)
Example 3: \( \left(\tfrac{4}{5}\times\tfrac{5}{14}\right)-\left(\tfrac{3}{10}\times\tfrac{2}{7}\right) \)
Compound fraction expressions appear across GCSE topics: ratio scaling (difference of two scaled amounts), enlargements (subtracting a second scaled copy), and mixture/dilution calculations (net change after two fractional operations). Mastering the structure means you can navigate multi-step fraction tasks confidently.
Lightly pencil a “spine” in your rough work: multiply → multiply → match denoms → subtract → simplify. This keeps you from skipping steps under time pressure.