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Discover how rewriting expressions reveals hidden connections between quantities in real-world problems.
People have been finding clever ways to rewrite math problems for thousands of years. Ancient merchants needed quick tricks to calculate prices, taxes, and discounts. They discovered that writing the same problem in a different way could make it much easier to solve. This idea — that the form of an expression matters just as much as its value — is at the heart of algebra.
Here is the big question this lesson answers: if two expressions look different but mean the same thing, why would you pick one form over another? The answer is that different forms reveal different information about a problem. Let's find out how.
Before we jump into examples, let's nail down the key ideas. An expression is a math phrase that combines numbers, variables (letters), and operations like addition or multiplication. When you rewrite an expression, you change its appearance without changing its value. Think of it like saying the same sentence in different words.
Let's look at the classic example from the standard. Imagine you have a price a dollars, and you increase it by 5%. You can write this two ways: a + 0.05a or 1.05a. The diagram below shows why these are the same.
Notice how Form 1 shows you the two parts of the total — the original and the extra 5%. Form 2 shows you the total as a single multiplication. Both are correct. You just pick the form that is most useful for the situation.
When you rewrite expressions, you rely on a few key properties. Let's see each one in action with equations.
Let's explore several real-world scenarios where rewriting an expression helps you understand what is really going on. The diagram below shows how the same situation can be written as an "add/subtract" form or a "multiply" form, and what each version tells you.
| Situation | Add/Subtract Form | Multiply Form | What It Tells You |
|---|---|---|---|
| 8% sales tax on cost c | c + 0.08c | 1.08c | Total is 108% of the original price |
| 25% off price p | p − 0.25p | 0.75p | You pay 75% of the original price |
| 10% raise on salary s | s + 0.10s | 1.10s | New salary is 110% of the old one |
| 40% fewer tickets t | t − 0.40t | 0.60t | Only 60% of the tickets remain |
A pair of sneakers costs d dollars. The store has a 15% off sale, and then the state adds 6% sales tax to the sale price. Write two different expressions for the final price and explain what each one shows.
Now that you can create equivalent expressions, the next question is: which form should you choose? Here is a handy comparison.
| Feature | Expanded / Add-Subtract Form | Factored / Multiply Form |
|---|---|---|
| What it looks like | a + 0.05a or 3x + 12 | 1.05a or 3(x + 4) |
| Best for | Seeing each separate part (original and change) | Quick computation or seeing the overall multiplier |
| Strength | Easy to identify the original amount and the added/subtracted piece | Easy to calculate — just one multiplication step |
| Limitation | Takes more steps to compute the final answer | Hides the individual parts so they are harder to see |
| Real-world use | Itemized receipts, budgets that show each line item | Quick mental math, repeated percent calculations |
The skill of rewriting expressions doesn't stop in 7th grade. It is one of the most important tools in all of math. Here is a preview of where this skill goes next.
| What You Learn Now (7th Grade) | Where It Goes Next |
|---|---|
| Combine like terms: a + 0.05a = 1.05a | In Algebra 1, you'll combine terms with higher powers: 2x² + 3x²= 5x² |
| Distribute: 3(x + 4) = 3x + 12 | In Algebra 1, you'll distribute with two binomials: (x + 3)(x + 2) = x² + 5x + 6 |
| Factor: 6x + 12 = 6(x + 2) | In Algebra 1 and 2, you'll factor quadratics: x² + 5x + 6 = (x + 2)(x + 3) |
| Rewrite percent problems | In 8th grade and beyond, you'll model exponential growth and compound interest |
Every time you rewrite an expression now, you are building a muscle that you will use in every math class from here on. The better you get at seeing equivalent forms, the easier algebra, geometry, and even calculus will be in the future.
In this lesson, you learned that rewriting expressions in different forms does not change their value — it changes what you can see. You used combining like terms to turn a + 0.05a into 1.05a, showing that "increase by 5%" is the same as "multiply by 1.05." You applied the distributive property to expand expressions like 3(x + 4) = 3x + 12, and reversed the process using factoring.
The expanded (add/subtract) form helps you see each part of a problem separately, while the factored (multiply) form gives you a quick single-step calculation. Both forms are equivalent expressions — same value, different view. Choosing the right form helps you understand the problem and solve it more easily. This skill is the foundation for everything you'll do in algebra and beyond!