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6.3 The Addition Rule

6.3 The Addition Rule

Assessment

Presentation

Mathematics

9th - 12th Grade

Practice Problem

Easy

Created by

Jaime Huey

Used 1+ times

FREE Resource

4 Slides • 9 Questions

1

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Match

Match em up!

Event A: Randomly select a female public school teacher.

Event B: Randomly select a public school teacher who is 25 years old.

are delicious

Event A: Randomly select a student with a birthday in April.

Event B: Randomly select a student with a birthday in May.

Not mutually exclusive

Tacos

Mutually exclusive

4

Match

Match em up!

Event A: Randomly select a member of the U.S. Congress.

Event B: Randomly select a male U.S. Senator

Chips and...

Event A: Randomly select an IHS student who is less than 16 years old.

Event B: Randomly select an IHS student who drives to school.

Not mutually exclusive

salsa

Mutually exclusive

5

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Math Response

You randomly pull one card from a standard deck of playing cards. What is the probability you pull an ace or a 10? Give your answer as an UN-simplified fraction.

Type answer here
Deg°
Rad

7

Math Response

You randomly pull one card from a standard deck of playing cards. What is the probability you pull a Jack, a Queen, or a King (a face card)? Give your answer as an UN-simplified fraction.

Type answer here
Deg°
Rad

8

Math Response

You randomly pull one card from a standard deck of playing cards. What is the probability you pull an ace, a 10, or a face card? Give your answer as a decimal rounded to the nearest hundredth if necessary.

Type answer here
Deg°
Rad

9

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10

Math Response

You randomly pull one card from a standard deck of playing cards. What is the probability you pull a club? Give your answer as an UN-simplified fraction.

Type answer here
Deg°
Rad

11

Math Response

You randomly pull one card from a standard deck of playing cards. What is the probability you pull an even number? Give your answer as an UN-simplified fraction.

Type answer here
Deg°
Rad

12

Math Response

You randomly pull one card from a standard deck of playing cards. What is the "overlap" between pulling a club and pulling an even number (HINT: how many CLUBS are EVEN numbers)? Give your answer as an UN-simplified fraction.

Type answer here
Deg°
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13

Math Response

You randomly pull one card from a standard deck of playing cards. What is the probability you pull a club or an even number? Give your answer as a decimal rounded to the nearest hundredth if necessary.

Type answer here
Deg°
Rad
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