Foundation Mathematics is built around real-world application. This key knowledge area brings together all number skills — operations, percentages, fractions, ratios, rounding — and applies them to financial and measurement situations encountered in everyday life and work.
KEY TAKEAWAY: Number skills are tools. The skill being assessed in VCAA is whether you can choose the right tool and apply it correctly to a realistic scenario.
Example:
Normal rate: $\$24.50$/hr. Work $38$ hrs normal + $4$ hrs overtime at $1.5\times$.
$$\text{Normal pay} = 38 \times 24.50 = \$931$$
$$\text{Overtime pay} = 4 \times (24.50 \times 1.5) = 4 \times 36.75 = \$147$$
$$\text{Total} = \$931 + \$147 = \$1078$$
$$\text{Sale price} = \text{Original price} \times (1 - \text{discount rate})$$
$20\%$ off $\$350$: \$350 \times 0.80 = \$280$
Australia’s GST rate is $10\%$.
$$\text{Price incl. GST} = \text{price excl. GST} \times 1.10$$
$$\text{GST component} = \text{price incl. GST} \div 11$$
$$I = P \times r \times t$$
Where $P$ = principal, $r$ = annual rate (as decimal), $t$ = time in years.
$\$5000$ at $4\%$ p.a. for $3$ years:
$$I = 5000 \times 0.04 \times 3 = \$600$$
$$\text{Balance} = \text{Income} - \text{Expenses}$$
A positive balance = surplus; a negative balance = deficit.
EXAM TIP: Show each step of your financial calculation. In multi-step problems, a clear layout earns method marks even if you make an arithmetic error.
| From | To | Operation |
|---|---|---|
| km | m | $\times 1000$ |
| m | cm | $\times 100$ |
| cm | mm | $\times 10$ |
| kg | g | $\times 1000$ |
| L | mL | $\times 1000$ |
| hours | minutes | $\times 60$ |
$$d = s \times t, \quad s = \frac{d}{t}, \quad t = \frac{d}{s}$$
A car travels $240\text{ km}$ in $3$ hours: $s = \frac{240}{3} = 80\text{ km/h}$
$$\text{Unit price} = \frac{\text{total cost}}{\text{quantity}}$$
$500\text{ g}$ for $\$3.20$ vs $750\text{ g}$ for $\$4.50$:
- $500\text{ g}$: $\$3.20 \div 500 = \$0.0064$/g
- $750\text{ g}$: $\$4.50 \div 750 = \$0.0060$/g → better value
VCAA FOCUS: VCAA exam questions are set in realistic contexts — shopping, building, cooking, travel, wages. Practice reading the scenario carefully and extracting the numbers you need.