Practise estimating multi-step calculations by rounding values before carrying out multiplication and division.
Round each number sensibly, multiply the numerator, then divide. Always check your result is of the right order of magnitude.
In GCSE Maths, multi-step estimation problems test your ability to simplify complex expressions using rounding and order of operations. The aim is not precision but reasoning — producing a value that is close enough to the real answer while demonstrating logical working. Here we estimate (498.7 × 47.6) ÷ 112.4 by rounding each number to one or two significant figures before performing the calculation.
Example 1: (498.7 × 47.6) ÷ 112.4 → rounded ≈ 220.
Example 2: (256.3 × 39.8) ÷ 45.2 → round to 250, 40, 50 ⇒ (10 000 ÷ 50) = 200.
Example 3: (812.9 × 28.4) ÷ 95.6 → round to 800, 30, 100 ⇒ (24 000 ÷ 100) = 240.
Estimation of combined multiplication and division is widely used in real life. Economists estimate average cost per unit by dividing total cost by approximate production volume. Engineers estimate load capacities or energy outputs using rounded inputs before precise testing. Shoppers mentally calculate discounts or price-per-item ratios by rounding values to easy multiples. These skills show how estimation simplifies decision-making under time pressure.
Q1: Why round 112.4 to 110 instead of 100?
A: Rounding to 110 keeps the ratio realistic. Rounding too far could distort the estimate and make it less credible.
Q2: What happens if I round all to 1 s.f.?
A: You might get (500 × 50) ÷ 100 = 250, which overestimates the true value slightly — showing why thoughtful rounding matters.
Q3: How can I check that my estimate is reasonable?
A: Use magnitude sense: multiplying numbers near 500 and 50 gives roughly 25 000, and dividing by about 100 gives a result around 250, so 220 is perfectly sensible.
Show every rounded number clearly in your working. Even if your final answer differs from the model answer, examiners award marks for correct reasoning and order of operations. Always perform multiplication first when brackets indicate it, and finish with division.
Multi-step estimation problems strengthen mental arithmetic and number sense. By rounding each number sensibly, performing multiplication first, and dividing accurately, you can produce a quick, clear approximation that demonstrates full understanding of estimation techniques.