Evidence 1
The student separates useful quantities from background details.
Difficulty Practice Guide
This page shows what medium practice should demand for grade 7 percents word problems. The goal is not a larger worksheet. The goal is to make the student's reasoning visible enough to choose the next better problem.
What Changes At This Difficulty
Student Work Signals
MathRoutine watches for whether the student understood the situation, wrote a useful setup, handled the calculation, and answered the exact question asked.
separate useful numbers from background details
complete a two-step setup
interpret the result with the correct unit
Medium Readiness
A difficulty page earns its place only when it tells parents and teachers what to look for at this exact level. For medium grade 7 percents word problems, the attempt should show more than a final number.
Evidence 1
The student separates useful quantities from background details.
Evidence 2
The solution uses a planned two-step or three-step structure.
Evidence 3
Units, labels, or comparison language are interpreted after calculation.
Difficulty-Matched Examples
These examples are not meant to be the whole practice set. They show the kind of reasoning pressure medium work should create for grade 7 percents word problems.
A jacket is marked down 20%, then the sale price is taxed 6%. The original price is $75. What is the final cost?
Reasoning strategy
Apply the discount first, then apply tax to the discounted price.
Support cue
Make the changing base explicit so the percent is not applied to the wrong amount.
A student answered 36 questions correctly on a 45-question quiz. On a retake, the student answered 42 correctly. By how many percentage points did the score improve?
Reasoning strategy
Find each percent score, then compare the percentages.
Support cue
Distinguish percentage points from percent increase.
Why This Matters
Basic gives repeated targeted practice. Pro becomes useful when the student needs help understanding wording, recovering the setup, or seeing the same misconception return across attempts.
Compare plansDiagnosis Examples
Difficulty only matters if it exposes a clearer learning need. At this level, MathRoutine looks for whether the miss comes from the setup, the computation, the wording, a hidden quantity, or the final question.
Possible student miss
The student uses the final amount as the percent-change base.
MathRoutine should separate
Original amount is not being protected as the reference whole.
Follow-up practice
Use percent-change stories that explicitly mark original, change, and final.
Possible student miss
The student subtracts the percent from 100 but forgets to apply it to the amount.
MathRoutine should separate
Percent language is understood, but the part-whole calculation is incomplete.
Follow-up practice
Practice percent-of-a-number problems inside shopping and survey contexts.
Placement Decision
Move down
Move down if the student understands the math only after the wording is simplified.
Stay here
Stay here when the student solves correctly but still needs practice planning the sequence of steps.
Move up
Move to hard when the student can explain why each step is needed before calculating.
Compare Nearby Levels
Use the topic page for the full skill map, or compare adjacent difficulty guides when the student is between levels.