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TUESDAY, MAY 1 ST •Write Down Math Homework •Complete warm-up 1.Explain the difference between: experimental, theoretical, and compound probability 2. Solve: 2x – 1 = -10 Warm up

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Tuesday, May 1 st. Warm up. Explain the difference between: experimental, theoretical, and compound probability Solve: 2x – 1 = -10. Write Down Math Homework Complete warm-up . Vocabulary Review . What is the sample space of rolling a 10 sided number cube?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Tuesday, May 1 st

TUESDAY, MAY 1ST •Write Down Math Homework•Complete warm-up

1.Explain the difference between: experimental, theoretical, and compound probability

2. Solve: 2x – 1 = -10

Warm up

Page 2: Tuesday, May 1 st

Vocabulary Review

Page 3: Tuesday, May 1 st

What is the sample space of rolling a 10 sided number cube?

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What are all of your outcomes of flipping two coins?

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Give me a an experiment that would have 5 outcomes

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How do you write the ratio of

experimental probability?

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What is a trial

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Tell whether each set of events is independent or dependent. Explain you answer.A. You select a card from a standard deck of cards and hold it. A friend selects another card from the same deck. Dependent; your friend cannot pick the card you picked and has

fewer cards to choose from.

B. You flip a coin and it lands heads up. You flip the same coin and it lands heads up again.Independent; the result of the first toss does not affect the sample

space for the second toss.

ReviewIndependent Vs. Dependent

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REVIEW OF PROBABILITYSAMPLE SPACE

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IndependentProbability

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INDEPENDENT PROBABILITY

You are multiplying fractions!

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EXAMPLE #1Two Boxes each contain 4 marbles:

red, blue, green, and black. One marble is chosen from each box. What is the probability of choosing a blue marble from each box?

1. Independent or dependent?2. Probability in box 1? Probability

in box 2?3. Multiply the two events together!

I1 14 4and

1 1 14 4 16

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#2 YOU TRY! An Experiment consists of spinning the

spinner 3 times.

1. What is the probability of spinning a 2 all three times.

2. What is the probability of spinning an even number all three times.

1234

51 1 1 15 5 5 125

2 2 2 85 5 5 125

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PRACTICE PROBLEMSIn your groups, find the probability of these

compound events:3. A coin is flipped 4 times. What is the probability of flipping 4 heads in a row.

4. An experiment consists of spinning the spinner twice. What is the probability of spinning two odd numbers?

5. An experiment consists of randomly selecting a marble from a bag, replacing it, and then selecting another marble. The bag contains 3 red marbles and 12 green marbles. What is the probability of selecting a red marble and then a green marble with replacement?

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A coin is flipped 4 times. What is the probability of flipping 4 heads in a row.

Because each flip of the coin has an equal probability of landing heads up, or a tails, the sample space for each flip is the same. The events are independent.

P(h, h, h, h) = P(h) • P(h) • P(h) • P(h)

The probability of landing heads up is with each event.

Answer #1

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An experiment consists of spinning the spinner twice. What is the probability of spinning two odd numbers?

The result of one spin does not affect any following spins. The events are independent.

With 6 numbers on the spinner, 3 of which are odd, the probability of landing on two odd numbers is

P(odd, odd) = P(odd) P(odd)• .

Answer #2

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P(red, green) = P(red) P(green)The probability of selecting red is ,

and the probability of selecting green is .

Answer #3

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QUESTION OF THE DAY

What do you think is going to change if we

find the compound probability of dependent

events?!?!

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To determine the probability of two dependent events, multiply the probability of the first event

times the probability of the second event after the first event

has occurred.

The DENOMINATOR in the second probability

changes!

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Important! You must assume that you got the

first event!

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EXAMPLE #1 Suppose you draw 2 marbles

WITHOUT REPLACEMENT from a bag that contains 3 purple and 3 orange marbles.

1. What is the probability of drawing a purple both times?

2. What is the probability of drawing a purple, then an orange?

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#2 YOU TRY! The letter in the phrase: I LOVE

MATH are placed in a box. If two letters are chosen at random and without replacement, what is the probability that they will both be vowels?

Raise your hand when you think your group has the correct

answer!

Page 23: Tuesday, May 1 st

#3 YOU TRY Carmen drops 6 purple marbles,

5 black marbles and 3 orange marbles into a bag. Without looking, 2 marbles are chosen without replacement. What is the probability of choosing a purple and an orange?

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WHAT’S THE DIFFERENCE?A bag contains 1 red, 7 black, and 2 yellow marbles.

1. Find the following probability when the marble is replaced after the first drawing.a. P (red, then yellow) b. P (black, then red) c. P(black, black)_________

2. Find the following probability when the marble is not replaced after the first drawing.d. P(yellow, then red)e. P (black, then not black) f. P(yellow, then yellow)

Page 25: Tuesday, May 1 st

WEDNESDAY, MAY 2ND •Write Down Math Homework•Complete warm-up

1.Solve: 5x – 8 = -11

2. When you flip a coin and roll a die, what is the probability of getting tales and a 5?

Warm up

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REVIEW

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COUNTING PRINCIPLE

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License plates are being produced that have a single letter followed by three digits. All license plates are equally likely.

Find the number of possible license plates.Use the Fundamental Counting Principal.

letter first digit second digit third digit

26 choices10 choices 10 choices 10 choices26 • 10 • 10 • 10 = 26,000

The number of possible 1-letter, 3-digit license plates is 26,000.

Example #1

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YOU TRY!1. Employee ID codes at the mall

contain 2 letters followed by 3 digits. Find the number of Possible ID Codes.

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The Fundamental Counting Principle tells you only the number of

outcomes in some experiments, not what the outcomes are. A tree

diagram is a way to show all of the possible outcomes.

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Tree Diagrams

Finding outcomes……

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•All outcomes are listed on the RIGHT/VERY BOTTOM•A tree diagram is a way to show all of the possible outcomes.

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I have a photo of Sidney that I want to mat and frame. I can choose from a blue, purple, red, or green mat and a metal or wood frame. Describe all of the ways I could frame this photo with one mat and one frame.

You can find all of the possible outcomes by making a tree diagram.

There should be 4 • 2 = 8 different ways to frame the photo.

Example #1

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Each “branch” of the tree diagram represents a different way to frame the photo. The ways shown in the branches could be written as (blue, metal), (blue, wood), (purple, metal), (purple, wood), (red, metal), (red, wood), (green, metal), and (green, wood).

The Tree Diagram

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A baker can make yellow or white cakes with a choice of chocolate, strawberry, or vanilla icing. Describe all of the possible combinations of cakes.

You can find all of the possible outcomes by making a tree diagram. There should be 2 • 3 = 6 different cakes available.

YOU TRY!

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The different cake possibilities are (yellow, chocolate), (yellow, strawberry), (yellow, vanilla), (white, chocolate), (white, strawberry), and (white, vanilla).

white cakeyellow cake

chocolate icing

vanilla icing

strawberry icing

chocolate icing

vanilla icing

strawberry icing

Tree Branch