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Independent and Dependent Events - Probability

Independent and Dependent Events - Probability

Assessment

Presentation

Mathematics

7th - 9th Grade

Medium

CCSS
7.SP.C.8B

Standards-aligned

Created by

Marnae L. Brown

Used 3+ times

FREE Resource

6 Slides • 7 Questions

1

Independent and Dependent Events - Probability

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2

Independent & Dependent Events

  • Independent - One activity does not effect the outcome of a different activity. (Drawing marbles from a bag, but putting them back each time.)

  • Dependent - One activity DOES effect the outcome of another activity. (Drawing a card from a deck of cards, not putting it back and drawing another.)

3

Multiple Select

You roll a number cube twice. The first time is a 3 and the second time is an even number.

1

Independent

2

Dependent

4

Multiple Select

You randomly draw a marble from a bag of marbles. You get a red and don't put it back into the bag. You draw another marble out of the bag and get a yellow.

1

Independent

2

Dependent

5

Probability of an Independent Event

Use the formula for the probability of independent events.

P(A and B) = P(A)⋅P(B)


Example: Find the probability of spinning an odd number on a spinner numbered 1 - 5; and the probability of flipping a coin and landing on tails.

6

Multiple Choice

Find the probability of spinning a 2 on a spinner numbered 1 - 5; and the probability of flipping a coin and landing on tails.

1

1/10 or 10%

2

1/4 or 25%

3

1/2 or 50%

4

2/3 or 67%

7

Probability of a Dependent Event

The probability of two dependent events A and B is the probability of A times the probability of B after A occurs.


P(A and B) = P(A)⋅P(B after A)


People are randomly chosen to be game show contestants from an audience of 100 people. You are with 5 of your relatives and 6 other friends. What is the probability that one of your relatives is chosen fi rst, and then one of your friends is chosen second?

8

Multiple Choice

People are randomly chosen to be game show contestants from an audience of 100 people. You are with 5 of your relatives and 6 other friends. What is the probability that you, your relatives, and your friends are not chosen to be either of the first two contestants?

1

50/70 or 71.4%

2

58/75 or 77.3%

3

60/70 or 85.7%

4

88/100 or 88%

9

Tree Diagram

Flipping a coin and landing on heads or tails. There are three favorable outcomes in the sample space: HHT, HTH, and THH.


P(2 heads and 1 tails) =

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10

Fill in the Blank

Question image

What is the probability of flipping at least two tails?

11

Table Diagram

You roll a number cube and flip a coin. What is the probability of rolling a number greater than 4 and flipping tails? Use a table to find the sample space.


P(greater than 4 and tails)

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12

Fill in the Blank

Question image

What is the probability of rolling at most 4 (that means the number can't be higher than 4) and flipping heads?

13

Poll

How well do you think you understand compound probability?

I got it, no problem!

I'm getting there but need some practice.

I'm struggling, but think I'm on the right path.

I am really struggling and would like some more instruction.

Independent and Dependent Events - Probability

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