AP Stats Unit 6 MCQ

AP Stats Unit 6 MCQ

11th - 12th Grade

18 Qs

quiz-placeholder

Similar activities

Quiz on Commission and Salaries & Wages

Quiz on Commission and Salaries & Wages

12th Grade

20 Qs

FUNÇÃO DO 1º E 2º GRAU

FUNÇÃO DO 1º E 2º GRAU

10th - 11th Grade

13 Qs

ECUACIÓN CUADRATICA

ECUACIÓN CUADRATICA

11th Grade

15 Qs

hypothesis testing

hypothesis testing

11th - 12th Grade

16 Qs

ON TAP

ON TAP

12th Grade

20 Qs

INTEGRALES DE POLINOMIOS

INTEGRALES DE POLINOMIOS

12th Grade

15 Qs

Quis persamaan trigonometri

Quis persamaan trigonometri

10th - 12th Grade

15 Qs

StatProb Lesson 4 Quiz Reviewer (SY 23 - 24)

StatProb Lesson 4 Quiz Reviewer (SY 23 - 24)

11th Grade

15 Qs

AP Stats Unit 6 MCQ

AP Stats Unit 6 MCQ

Assessment

Quiz

Mathematics

11th - 12th Grade

Practice Problem

Hard

Created by

Barbara White

FREE Resource

AI

Enhance your content in a minute

Add similar questions
Adjust reading levels
Convert to real-world scenario
Translate activity
More...

18 questions

Show all answers

1.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

3 mins • 1 pt

Media Image

Choose an American household at random and let the random variable X be the number of cars (including SUVs and light trucks) they own. Here is the probability model if we ignore the few households that own more than 5 cars:


A housing company builds houses with two-car garages. What percent of households have more cars than the garage can hold?

13%

20%

45%

55%

80%

2.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 mins • 1 pt

Media Image

Choose an American household at random and let the random variable X be the number of cars (including SUVs and light trucks) they own. Here is the probability model if we ignore the few households that own more than 5 cars:

What’s the expected number of cars in a randomly selected American household?

Between 0 and 5

1.00

1.75

1.84

2.00

3.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 mins • 1 pt

A deck of cards contains 52 cards, of which 4 are aces. You are offered the following wager: Draw one card at random from the deck. You win $10 if the card drawn is an ace. Otherwise, you lose $1. If you make this wager very many times, what will be the mean amount you win?

About −$1, because you will lose most of the time.

About $9, because you win $10 but lose only $1.

About −$0.15; that is, on average you lose about 15 cents.

About $0.77; that is, on average you win about 77 cents.

About $0, because the random draw gives you a fair bet.

4.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 mins • 1 pt

The deck of 52 cards contains 13 hearts. Here is another wager: Draw one card at random from the deck. If the card drawn is a heart, you win $2. Otherwise, you lose $1. Compare this wager (call it Wager 2) with that of the previous exercise (call it Wager 1). Which one should you prefer?

Wager 1, because it has a higher expected value.

Wager 2, because it has a higher expected value.

Wager 1, because it has a higher probability of winning.

Wager 2, because it has a higher probability of winning.

Both wagers are equally favorable.

5.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 mins • 1 pt

The number of calories in a one-ounce serving of a certain breakfast cereal is a random variable with mean 110 and standard deviation 10. The number of calories in a cup of whole milk is a random variable with mean 140 and standard deviation 12. For breakfast, you eat one ounce of the cereal with 1/2 cup of whole milk. Let T be the random variable that represents the total number of calories in this breakfast. The MEAN of T is:

110

140

180

195

250

6.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 mins • 1 pt

The number of calories in a one-ounce serving of a certain breakfast cereal is a random variable with mean 110 and standard deviation 10. The number of calories in a cup of whole milk is a random variable with mean 140 and standard deviation 12. For breakfast, you eat one ounce of the cereal with 1/2 cup of whole milk. Let T be the random variable that represents the total number of calories in this breakfast. The STANDARD DEVIATION of T is:

22

16

15.62

11.66

4

7.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 mins • 1 pt

Joe reads that 1 out of 4 eggs contains salmonella bacteria. So he never uses more than 3 eggs in cooking. If eggs do or don’t contain salmonella independently of each other, the number of contaminated eggs when Joe uses 3 chosen at random has the following distribution:

binomial; n = 4 and p = ¼

binomial; n = 3 and p = 1/4

binomial; n = 3 and p = 1/3

geometric; p = ¼

geometric; p = 1/3

Create a free account and access millions of resources

Create resources

Host any resource

Get auto-graded reports

Google

Continue with Google

Email

Continue with Email

Classlink

Continue with Classlink

Clever

Continue with Clever

or continue with

Microsoft

Microsoft

Apple

Apple

Others

Others

Already have an account?