It has taken me a while to catch on to what is going on here, partly because the question was not well explained at the start, and making this to be a mindreading exercise in more ways than one.
Let's see if I have the picture as you saw it...
A current meter was available for a task, but its FSD was slightly less than the application required, so the meter's range was extended by about 10% by adding a crazy circuit around it, equivalent to a shunt resistor of 18 ohms in parallel to the meter movement's resistance of 1 ohm. Presumably the face of the meter is now rescaled so FSD reads 10% higher?
If we determine by how much this metering arrangement will upset the current in the 80 ohm resistor in Fig 1, thanks to gneill we know that it reduces the current by only about 1.2%. The big problem I have here is that D'Arsonval movements can't carry that many mA.
Now, if the application could tolerate an upset of 10% when the meter was inserted, then it seems the design has been tighter than necessary. Or maybe it's not the way it was intended to be solved?
Let's start over, looking at it differently.
You have a bare meter movement (D'Arsonval meter). They are very sensitive devices, requiring less than a mA for FSD, so shunt resistors are mandatory for measuring fractions of amps. This would make the metering arrangement always equivalent to less than 1 ohm, no matter what value of shunt resistor (typically around 0.1 ohm) is added. If FSD is set to too large a value, for example, 10 A, it will be difficult to accurately take a reading around 0.25 A. So you'd choose FSD to be no more than 1.25 amp so your 0.25 A is at least 20% along the scale. A meter's accuracy is often given as % of FSD, so for 10% accuracy at 0.25A, it would equate to 2% FSD accuracy at 1.25A FSD.
All that remains is to determine R that will turn the meter movement into an ammeter with 1.25A FSD.

Alas, we are lacking a vital piece of information here.
Have you discussed this with other students? Did others in the class not ask for extra details during the test?