8 Tax, Tip, and Discount Activities for Math Class - Idea Galaxy (2024)

I’m excited to share with yousome ideas for tax, tips, and discount activities for your math classroom. If you’re looking for ideas on how to plan for teaching this topic, you can read more here. Teaching tax, tips, and discounts is a great topic for activities because it’s a real world topic from top to bottom. And 7th grade students get great review with proportions in real world applications. The activities in this post are excellent for independent practice, bell ringers, anticipatory sets, homework, math centers, etc.

Here’s the list of 8 tax, tips, and discount activities:

  1. Shmoop Video about Percents
  2. Percents Video from Math Bites
  3. Paper Chain
  4. Math at the Mall from Math Playground
  5. Task Cards
  6. Tax, Tips, and Discounts Mazes
  7. Quizizz
  8. Jeopardy

Anticipatory Sets

I love to use videos for anticipatory sets. If you find the right videos and have students looking for one thing, or answering one focus question, during the video they can be engaging. It is a great way to get students keyed in at the beginning of the day’s lesson. My go to site with a wide range of videos and a little bit of silliness is Shmoop.com.

Shmoop video about percents

This free video from Shmoop shows some examples of percents. After watching this video in my class, it organically started a conversation about credit cards. Most of my 7th graders knew nothing about credit cards and how they work, so it was cool to see the look on their faces when they realized how much more they have to pay for something on a credit card.

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Lately, the question I’ve been asking my students during videos is, “What is the central idea of this video?” My wife teaches language arts at the same school as me and I know that students struggle with finding the central idea. So, this gives me a way to help out with improving language arts skills.

Percents-Math Bites with Danica McKellar

This video is 5:30 and has a lot of information about percents. The video is one in a series from Danica McKellar who played Winnie in the Wonder Years. This is a quirky video mixed with some math concepts. Also, it features a female mathematician. I think it’s great to show girls that math is for girls, too. This works as an activity at the beginning of class and will activate students’ prior knowledge.

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Partner Activities

I love having students work in partners. Students are so much more engaged when they work in partners, and if you train them right they’ll help each other. When I was first a teacher, I was reluctant to let students talk to each other. But I’ve learned how to leverage their enthusiasm for talking to actually help them learn. I absolutely love partner activities because they keep students more engaged and greatly increases the amount of math talk happening in my classroom. Here are a couple of tax, tips, and discounts activities for you to try out with your students:

Paper chain with a partner

I love paper chains. When I first heard about them I was skeptical. It didn’t make a lot of sense to me why they needed to make a chain. But then I did this Tax, Tips, and Discounts Paper Chain activity with students. Students put the answers in order and it gets students working together. After they put all the questions in order, they get it checked. Finally, they put the chain together. It doesn’t take that long and we have a trophy of sorts to show their learning. I’ve learned (again) not to knock something until you try it.8 Tax, Tip, and Discount Activities for Math Class - Idea Galaxy (3)

Math at the mallonline game

Math at the Mall is a free game from Math Playground. I have the students play this in partners because they are more likely to keep each other accountable. It’s just a cute and engaging way to get students to do some real world practice. The questions are good and students love getting to play a game. They answer questions and collect gold coins. This could be used as a fast finisher tax, tips, and discount activity.

Task cards

There are so many things that you can do with task cards. My favorite is having students work in partners. I always use self-checking task cards because it gives students the opportunity to think about their mistakes. Thesetax, tips, and discounts task cards are scaffolded and move up from one level to the next as you go. 8 Tax, Tip, and Discount Activities for Math Class - Idea Galaxy (4)

Independent Tax, Tips, and Discounts Activities

Mazes

This is a set of three mazes about finding tax, tips, and discounts. I like to use them as a bell ringer after the students have gotten the hang of it. These particular mazes have two mazes where they are just finding the tax, tip, or discount and the last maze they have to find the total after tax, etc. Also, these mazes work great as a review activity later in the year. Students are so engaged with them and they are so much less intimidating than a regular worksheet. We basically do a maze everyday in my class.8 Tax, Tip, and Discount Activities for Math Class - Idea Galaxy (5)

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Quizizz

Quizizz is an online quiz maker that turns questions into a fun game. Students can race against each other and earn points. They like it a lot. One thing that I love about this site is how many quizzes have already been made for you. I usually search for the topic I want and scroll through a lot of options. Next, I chose one and make a duplicate. After that you can customize it to your needs and set it to play. I like to choose “homework” mode. All you have to do is give your students a code and they can play. Here’sone exampleof a great game for this topic, and here’s example 2. Try this and I promise your students will like it. Quizizz assignments works great for a quick formative assessment or a quick homework assignment.

Whole class game to review tax, tip, and discount

Most of the time we review before a test with a whole class game. It gives me one last chance to see how they are doing and to fix any misconceptions that are still out there.

Jeopardy

There are a variety of whole class games that I like. For this topic we played a Jeopardy game from Scaffolded Math and Science. It was a great way for the students to review. We were crunched for time so we didn’t get through all of the questions. The questions consisted of easy to hard difficulty questions. Pro tip- I would suggest to first show students the unique way Jeopardy questions are asked because some of my kids got confused about that format. It was fun and I got to see exactly what they could and couldn’t do.

Wrapping it up

This unit on tax, tips, and discounts engaged my students and they had a lot of fun with the different activities. I hope that you can find some of these ideas useful and adapt them to your classroom.

If you are interested in getting our tax, tips, and discount activities that are no prep, just print and go, you can check them out here: Mazes, Paper Chain, and Task Cards.

Thanks so much for reading. Until next time!

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8 Tax, Tip, and Discount Activities for Math Class - Idea Galaxy (2024)

FAQs

How to do discount and tax in math? ›

You can also convert the discounted percentage to a decimal and multiply that by the original price. To calculate a tax, you can convert the percentage to a decimal, then multiply it by the price. If you want to know the total cost, including the tax, you can multiply the original price by one plus the decimal.

How do you find tax and tip in math? ›

To Find Tax or Tip

Find the percentage of tax or tip and convert the percent to a decimal (Hint: Remember that "percent" means "per hundred"). Multiply the decimal times the total price to find the tax or tip amount. Add the tax or tip amount to the total price.

What is an example of a tax in math? ›

Example: Sales Tax

The sales tax rate in a city is 9.3%. How much sales tax will you pay on a $140 purchase? The sales tax will be 9.3% of $140. To compute this, we multiply $140 by the percent written as a decimal: $140(0.093) = $13.02.

What comes first, discount or tax? ›

A nontaxable discount is applied after sales tax. A taxable discount is applied before sales tax. Both taxes are prorated among the items they apply to.

What is the formula for discount and discount? ›

The amount of money that is reduced from the list price of an item is called the discount. The percentage of this discount on the list price is called the discount rate. The formula to calculate the discount rate is: Discount % = (Discount/List Price) × 100.

What's 20% off $8? ›

Another way to say this is that 20% of $8.00 is $1.60. The shirt will cost $1.60 less than the original price of $8.

How do you calculate tax tips? ›

If you receive $20 or more per month in cash tips, report that income to your employer. Your employer will report your tip income on your W-2, Box 7 (Social Security tips). The law assumes an average tip rate of 8%, and it expects employees to report tips at least 8% of the gross food and drink sales.

What is the formula for tip calculator? ›

Figuring out the tip

If your total bill is $200 and you want to tip 15%, work out the tip by multiplying the total bill by 0.15. You can then add this amount to your bill when it comes to pay. Simple. Or alternatively, you can multiply the bill excluding service by 1.15 (assuming you want to leave that same 15% tip).

What is the definition of discount in math? ›

The discount equals the difference between the price paid for and it's par value. Discount is a kind of reduction or deduction in the cost price of a product.

What is a tax example? ›

For example, if you earn $1,000 in a state with a flat income tax rate of 10%, $100 in income taxes should be withheld from your paycheck when you earn that income. If, a week later, you take $100 from your remaining earnings to purchase a new smartwatch in a jurisdiction with a 5% sales tax.

How to calculate the tax? ›

Multiply the price of your item or service by the tax rate. If you have tax rate as a percentage, divide that number by 100 to get tax rate as a decimal. Then use this number in the multiplication process.

How do you find discount and tax? ›

Step-by-step guide to solving Discount, Tax, and Tip problems
  1. Discount \(=\) Multiply the regular price by the rate of discount.
  2. Selling price \(=\) original price \(–\) discount.
  3. Tax: To find tax, multiply the tax rate by the taxable amount (income, property value, etc.)
Nov 27, 2019

How do taxes work with discounts? ›

For example, if a shopper wants to purchase a laptop priced at $800 with an eight percent sales tax, and the store offers a 10 percent discount, the sales tax will apply to the discounted price, which is $720, and not to the original price of $800.

Which discount is deducted first? ›

Furthermore, the trade discount is deducted from the catalogue price of the products at the time of purchase or sales return, and the net amount is entered. The net amount that the consumer must pay is calculated after the discount has been applied.

What is the formula to calculate tax? ›

The formula for calculating the sales tax on a good or service is: selling price x sales tax rate, and when calculating the total cost of a purchase, the formula is: total sale amount = selling price + sales tax.

How to apply for a discount in math? ›

Discount = Listed Price - Selling Price. Discount = Listed Price × Discount Rate. Rate of Discount = Discount% = (Discount/Listed Price) × 100.

How do I deduct 20% off a price? ›

In order to take 20% off a price:
  1. Take the actual price.
  2. Divide the actual price by 100 and multiply it by 20 to calculate the savings.
  3. Subtract the savings from the original price.
  4. The number you've just calculated is the price after the discount.
  5. Enjoy your savings!
Apr 18, 2024

How do I subtract 20% tax? ›

Removing VAT

If you want to remove the VAT from a figure, you need to take the original figure and divide that by 100 and the VAT percentage combined. (So for a UK VAT of 20%, it would be 120). You then multiply the result by 100. We divided that amount by 120 and then multiply the result by 100.

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