
AP Statistics Unit 4 Review (AP Central ?s)
Authored by Amie O'Brien
Mathematics
12th Grade
CCSS covered
Used 201+ times

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This quiz comprehensively covers foundational probability concepts that are essential for AP Statistics students at the grade 12 level. The questions assess critical understanding of sample spaces, basic probability rules including the complement rule and addition principle, conditional probability and independence, mutually exclusive events, and discrete random variables including binomial and geometric distributions. Students must demonstrate mastery of calculating probabilities using fractions and decimals, interpreting probability in real-world contexts, understanding the difference between theoretical probability and long-run frequency, computing expected values and standard deviations of random variables, and applying the binomial distribution model. The mathematical reasoning required includes set theory notation, algebraic manipulation of probability formulas, and the ability to distinguish between different probability scenarios such as sampling with and without replacement. Created by Amie O'Brien, a Mathematics teacher in the US who teaches grade 12. This quiz serves as an excellent review tool for students preparing for the AP Statistics exam, specifically targeting Unit 4 content on probability and random variables. Teachers can utilize this assessment for multiple instructional purposes including diagnostic evaluation at the beginning of the probability unit, formative assessment during instruction to identify areas needing reinforcement, review sessions before major exams, or homework assignments to provide additional practice with AP-level questions. The quiz aligns with Common Core standards S-CP.1 through S-CP.9 covering conditional probability and independence, and S-MD.1 through S-MD.7 addressing discrete random variables and their distributions. The questions mirror the format and rigor of actual AP exam problems, making this an invaluable resource for building student confidence and competency in statistical reasoning.
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22 questions
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1.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
Each person in a group of twenty people at a hotel orders one meal chosen from oatmeal, eggs, or pancakes and one hot beverage chosen from coffee or tea. One person will be selected at random from the twenty people. What is the sample space for the meal and beverage for the person selected?
{(oatmeal, coffee), (oatmeal, tea), (eggs, coffee), (eggs, tea), (pancakes, coffee), (pancakes, tea)}
{(oatmeal, pancakes), (oatmeal, eggs), (eggs, pancakes), (coffee, tea)}
{(coffee, tea, oatmeal), (coffee, tea, eggs), (coffee, tea, pancakes)}
{oatmeal, coffee, pancakes, eggs, tea}
{(oatmeal, eggs, pancakes), (coffee, tea)}
Tags
CCSS.HSS.CP.A.1
2.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
At Mike’s favorite coffee shop, the coffee of the day is either a dark roast, a medium roast, or a light roast. From past experience, Mike knows that the probability of the coffee being a light roast is 0.15 and the probability of the coffee being a dark roast is 0.25. What is the probability of the coffee of the day not being a light roast or a dark roast on the next day that Mike visits the coffee shop?
0.15
0.25
0.40
0.60
0.85
Tags
CCSS.HSS.CP.A.1
CCSS.HSS.CP.B.7
3.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
Amy has 12 brown golf tees, 8 white golf tees, 10 red golf tees, 6 blue golf tees, and 12 green golf tees in her golf bag. If she selects one of the tees from the bag at random, what is the probability that she selects a tee that is not brown or blue?
Tags
CCSS.HSS.CP.A.1
CCSS.HSS.CP.B.7
4.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
A business journal reports that the probability that Internet users in the United States will use a mobile payment app is 0.60. The journal claims this indicates that out of 5 randomly selected Internet users, 3 will use the mobile payment app.
No, because the Internet users are not independent of each other.
No, because only 60% of all people use the Internet.
No, because 0.60 represents probability in the long run for many Internet users.
Yes, because Internet users are selected at random.
Yes, because 3 out of 5 is equal to 60%.
Tags
CCSS.HSS.IC.A.1
5.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
2 mins • 1 pt
At a local elementary school, 35 percent of all students have brown eyes, 45 percent have brown hair, and 60 percent have brown hair or brown eyes. A student will be selected at random from the school. Let E represent the event that the selected person has brown eyes, and let H represent the event that the selected person has brown hair.
Are E and H mutually exclusive events?
Yes, because P(E∩H)=0.
Yes, because P(E∩H)=0.2.
Yes, because P(E∩H)=0.6.
No, because P(E∩H)=0.2.
No, because P(E∩H)=0.6.
Tags
CCSS.HSS.CP.A.1
CCSS.HSS.CP.B.7
6.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
5 mins • 1 pt
For the lunch special at a high school cafeteria, students can get either salad or french fries as a side order. The following table shows the number of each side order for the lunch specials purchased on one day, classified by the grade of the student.
From those who purchased the lunch special that day, one student will be selected at random. What is the probability that the student selected will be in grade 10 given that the student ordered french fries as the side order?
Tags
CCSS.HSS.CP.A.1
CCSS.HSS.CP.A.3
CCSS.HSS.CP.B.6
CCSS.HSS.CP.A.4
7.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
2 mins • 1 pt
A high school theater club has 40 students, of whom 6 are left-handed. Two students from the club will be selected at random, one at a time without replacement. What is the probability that the 2 students selected will both be left-handed?
Tags
CCSS.HSS.CP.A.3
CCSS.HSS.CP.B.8
CCSS.HSS.CP.B.6
CCSS.HSS.CP.B.9
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