
AP Stats - Chapter 5 Review (ALL RELEASED AP EXAM QUESTIONS)
Authored by Kelly Kerschbaum
Mathematics
KG - Professional Development
CCSS covered
Used 33+ times

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This quiz covers fundamental probability concepts appropriate for Advanced Placement Statistics students, typically in grades 11-12. The questions assess core probability principles including basic probability calculations, independent and dependent events, conditional probability, complement rules, and the law of total probability. Students need to understand how to calculate probabilities from given data tables, work with binomial probability distributions, apply conditional probability formulas such as P(A|B) = P(A∩B)/P(B), and use complement rules to find "at least one" probabilities. The problems require students to distinguish between mutually exclusive and independent events, calculate joint probabilities using the addition and multiplication rules, and apply the law of total probability in complex scenarios involving multiple populations with different characteristics. These questions demand both computational skills and conceptual understanding of probability relationships. Created by Kelly Kerschbaum, a Mathematics teacher in US who teaches grade 14. This quiz serves as an excellent review tool for AP Statistics students preparing for the probability portion of their exam, featuring authentic released AP questions that mirror the format and complexity students will encounter. The quiz works effectively as a formative assessment to gauge student understanding before major tests, as homework to reinforce classroom instruction, or as targeted practice for students who need additional work with probability concepts. Teachers can use this during review sessions to identify knowledge gaps and provide focused remediation. The problems align with AP Statistics standards for probability including calculating probabilities from two-way tables, applying rules for independent events, using conditional probability in real-world contexts, and working with binomial distributions in practical scenarios.
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10 questions
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1.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
3 mins • 1 pt
A special 20 sided die is constructed so that each face has either a 1,2,3, or 4 on it. The table below gives the probability of each value. Which of the following is the probability of rolling an odd number?
0.5
0.02
0.2
0.6
Tags
CCSS.HSS.CP.B.7
CCSS.HSS.CP.A.1
2.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
3 mins • 1 pt
Forrest has determined that if he gets to the bus stop at 7:30AM, there is a 0.15 probability that he misses the bus. If he arrives at the bus stop three consecutive days in a row at 7:30 AM, what is the approximate probability that he catches the bus on all three days?
0.003
0.386
0.450
0.614
0.997
Tags
CCSS.HSS.CP.B.8
CCSS.HSS.CP.A.2
3.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
3 mins • 1 pt
Mrs. Heart asked 100 randomly selected adult Americans if they thought that women should be allowed to go into combat situations. Here are the results, classified by gender of the subject.
Which of the following is the probability of a "Yes" answer, given that the person was Female?
0.16
0.32
0.33
0.34
0.42
Tags
CCSS.HSS.CP.A.3
CCSS.HSS.CP.B.6
CCSS.HSS.CP.A.4
4.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
3 mins • 1 pt
Mrs. Heart asked 100 randomly selected adult Americans if they thought that women should be allowed to go into combat situations. Here are the results, classified by gender of the subject.
Which is the probability that a randomly selected subject in the study is Male or answered "No"?
0.18
0.68
0.78
0.84
0.98
Tags
CCSS.HSS.CP.B.7
CCSS.HSS.CP.A.1
5.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
3 mins • 1 pt
Internet sites often vanish or move, so that references to them can’t be followed. In fact, 13% of Internet sites referenced in major scientific journals are lost within two years after publication. If we randomly select seven Internet references, from scientific journals, what is the probability that at least one of them doesn’t work two years later?
0
0.130
0.377
0.752
1
Tags
CCSS.HSS.CP.B.7
6.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
3 mins • 1 pt
Of people who died in the United States in a recent year, 86% were white, 12% were black, and 2% were Asian. (We will ignore the small number of deaths among other races.) Diabetes caused 2.8% of deaths among whites, 4.4% among blacks, and 3.5% among Asians. What is the probability that a randomly chosen death was due to diabetes?
0.96
0.107
0.042
0.038
0.030
Tags
CCSS.HSS.CP.B.7
7.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
3 mins • 1 pt
An event A will occur with probability 0.5. An event B will occur with probability 0.6. The probability that both A and B will occur is 0.1. Which of the following is the conditional probability of A, given B?
1/2
3/10
1/5
1/6
Cannot be determined
Tags
CCSS.HSS.CP.A.3
CCSS.HSS.CP.B.8
CCSS.HSS.CP.B.6
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