Top Banner
Bell Work 1. What’s the probability that the spinner will land on blue? 2. Samuel has a bowl of fruit containing 3 apples, 2 oranges and 5 pears. If he randomly picks 1 piece of fruit from the bowl, what is the probability it will be a pear or an apple?
13

Bell Work 1. What’s the probability that the spinner will land on blue? 2. Samuel has a bowl of fruit containing 3 apples, 2 oranges and 5 pears. If he.

Jan 17, 2016

Download

Documents

Nigel Lawson
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Bell Work 1. What’s the probability that the spinner will land on blue? 2. Samuel has a bowl of fruit containing 3 apples, 2 oranges and 5 pears. If he.

Bell Work

1. What’s the probability that the spinner will land on blue?

2. Samuel has a bowl of fruit containing 3 apples, 2 oranges and 5 pears. If he randomly picks 1 piece of fruit from the bowl, what is the probability it will be a pear or an apple?

Page 2: Bell Work 1. What’s the probability that the spinner will land on blue? 2. Samuel has a bowl of fruit containing 3 apples, 2 oranges and 5 pears. If he.

12 3

4

567

8

Answers

apples3

2 oranges

5 pears+10 fruits total

1.

2.

Page 3: Bell Work 1. What’s the probability that the spinner will land on blue? 2. Samuel has a bowl of fruit containing 3 apples, 2 oranges and 5 pears. If he.

Experimental Probability

Page 4: Bell Work 1. What’s the probability that the spinner will land on blue? 2. Samuel has a bowl of fruit containing 3 apples, 2 oranges and 5 pears. If he.

Theoretical vs. Experimental Probability

Theoretical Probability:- It is how a probability of an event

“should” happen. Experimental Probability:- Experimental probability refers to the

probability of an event occurring when an experiment was conducted.

Page 5: Bell Work 1. What’s the probability that the spinner will land on blue? 2. Samuel has a bowl of fruit containing 3 apples, 2 oranges and 5 pears. If he.

Theoretical Probability

There is a bag of blue, green and red chips. There is a 12% possibility of randomly picking a blue chip and a 25% chance of randomly picking a red chip. What is the probability of picking a green chip?Hint: Your three options are green, blue and red. Their probability will add up to 100%

Answer: 63%

Page 6: Bell Work 1. What’s the probability that the spinner will land on blue? 2. Samuel has a bowl of fruit containing 3 apples, 2 oranges and 5 pears. If he.

Experimental probability

P(event) = number of times event occurs total number of trialsYou tossed a coin 10 times and recorded heads 3 times

and tails 7 times

P(head)= 3/10 , 0.3 or 30%

A head shows up 3 times out of 10 trials,

P(tail) = 7/10, 0.7 or 70%

A tail shows up 7 times out of 10 trials

HEADS

TAILS

Page 7: Bell Work 1. What’s the probability that the spinner will land on blue? 2. Samuel has a bowl of fruit containing 3 apples, 2 oranges and 5 pears. If he.

Comparing experimental and theoretical probability

Both probabilities are ratios that compare the number of favorable outcomes to the total number of possible outcomes

P(head)= 3/10 or 30%

P(tail) = 7/10 or 70%P(head) = 1/2 or 50%

P(tail) = 1/2 or 50%

All results will add up to 100% every time!

Page 8: Bell Work 1. What’s the probability that the spinner will land on blue? 2. Samuel has a bowl of fruit containing 3 apples, 2 oranges and 5 pears. If he.

Experimental Probability

You draw a marble out of the bag, record the color, and replace the marble. After 5 draws, you record 2 red marbles. According to your experiment what is the probability of drawing each color?

P(red)= 2/5, 0.4 or 40%

P(blue)= 3/5, 0.6 or 60%

Page 9: Bell Work 1. What’s the probability that the spinner will land on blue? 2. Samuel has a bowl of fruit containing 3 apples, 2 oranges and 5 pears. If he.

EXAMPLE 2You roll a number cube 100 times. Your results are given in the table below. Find the experimental probability of rolling a 6. Write your answer as a percent.

P(rolling a 6) = 18100

Number of favorable outcomesTotal number of rolls

= 0.18 = 18%

If you rolled the number cube 300 times then how many times would you predict that you would roll a 3?

60 times300100

20 x

Page 10: Bell Work 1. What’s the probability that the spinner will land on blue? 2. Samuel has a bowl of fruit containing 3 apples, 2 oranges and 5 pears. If he.

Rolled# of

times1 62 153 184 115 36 7

Results from rolling a six-sided die:

What is the experimental probability of rolling a 5? How does that compare to the theoretical probability?

Experimental:P(rolling a 4) = 3/60 = 1/20

Theoretical: P(rolling a 4) = 1/6

Page 11: Bell Work 1. What’s the probability that the spinner will land on blue? 2. Samuel has a bowl of fruit containing 3 apples, 2 oranges and 5 pears. If he.

Experimental ProbabilityExampleA class group flipped a coin and recorded their results below.

What is their experimental probability of landing on heads?Solution

The group landed on heads 6 times, so the experimental probability is:

Trial: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Result: T H T H H H T T H H

6 3

10 5

successes

trials

Page 12: Bell Work 1. What’s the probability that the spinner will land on blue? 2. Samuel has a bowl of fruit containing 3 apples, 2 oranges and 5 pears. If he.

Using the spinner below, what is the sample space? What is the probability that the spinner will land on “B” as a percentage?

A B

CD

E

A,B,C,D,E

1/5 = 20%

Page 13: Bell Work 1. What’s the probability that the spinner will land on blue? 2. Samuel has a bowl of fruit containing 3 apples, 2 oranges and 5 pears. If he.

Practice:Experimental

Probability Worksheet