Chapter 5, AP Statistics

Chapter 5, AP Statistics

10th Grade - University

10 Qs

quiz-placeholder

Similar activities

Probability Test Review MCQ

Probability Test Review MCQ

10th - 12th Grade

10 Qs

Chapter 5 AP Stats

Chapter 5 AP Stats

10th Grade - University

10 Qs

Prob Stat Chapter 5 Practice

Prob Stat Chapter 5 Practice

10th Grade - University

10 Qs

Chapter 5 Stats

Chapter 5 Stats

9th - 12th Grade

14 Qs

AP Stat Unit 5 Review

AP Stat Unit 5 Review

9th - 12th Grade

14 Qs

Prob Stat Chapter 5 Practice

Prob Stat Chapter 5 Practice

9th - 12th Grade

14 Qs

AP Stat Chapter 5

AP Stat Chapter 5

9th - 12th Grade

14 Qs

Chapter 5 AP Stats Review

Chapter 5 AP Stats Review

9th - 12th Grade

14 Qs

Chapter 5, AP Statistics

Chapter 5, AP Statistics

Assessment

Quiz

Mathematics

10th Grade - University

Hard

Created by

Barbara White

FREE Resource

10 questions

Show all answers

1.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 mins • 1 pt

An assignment of probability must obey which of the following?
The probability of any event must be a number between 0 and 1, inclusive.
The sum of all the probabilities of all outcomes in the sample space must be exactly 1.
The probability of an event is the sum of the outcomes in the sample space which make up the event.
All of these reasons

2.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 mins • 1 pt

Students at University X must be in one of the class ranks—freshman, sophomore, junior, or senior. At University X, 35% of the students are freshmen and 30% are sophomores. If a student is selected at random, the probability that her or she is either a junior or a senior is
30%
35%
65%
70%

3.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 mins • 1 pt

In a particular game, a fair die is tossed. If the number of spots showing is either four or five, you win $1. If the number of spots showing is six, you win $4. And if the number of spots showing is one, two, or three, you win nothing. You are going to play the game twice.
The probability that you win $4 both times is
1/6
1/3
1/36
1/12

4.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 mins • 1 pt

In a particular game, a fair die is tossed. If the number of spots showing is either four or five, you win $1. If the number of spots showing is six, you win $4. And if the number of spots showing is one, two, or three, you win nothing. You are going to play the game twice.
The probability that you win money at least once in the two games is
.75
.5
.25
.125

5.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 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.
The conditional probability of A given B is
.5
.3
.2
1/6

6.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 mins • 1 pt

 Experience has shown that a certain lie detector will show a positive reading (indicates a lie) 10% of the time when a person is telling the truth and 95% of the time when a person is lying. Suppose that a random sample of 5 suspects is subjected to a lie detector test regarding a recent one-person crime. Then the probability of observing no positive reading if all suspects plead innocent and are telling the truth is
.409
.735
.00001
.590

7.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 mins • 1 pt

If you buy one ticket in the Provincial Lottery, then the probability that you will win a prize is 0.11. If you buy one ticket each month for five months, what is the probability that you will win at least one prize?
.55
.50
.44
.45

Create a free account and access millions of resources

Create resources
Host any resource
Get auto-graded reports
or continue with
Microsoft
Apple
Others
By signing up, you agree to our Terms of Service & Privacy Policy
Already have an account?

Discover more resources for Mathematics