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Probability and Likelyhood

Probability and Likelyhood

Assessment

Presentation

Mathematics

6th - 8th Grade

Medium

Created by

Steven Smith

Used 1+ times

FREE Resource

9 Slides • 17 Questions

1

Probability

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What are the chances?

2

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How likely an event will occur

Define Probablity

​A number between 0 (0%) and 1 (100%)

​Written as P(event) or P(e)

  • Where the word event can be replaced with what you want to occur.

  • Example: P(heads)

3

Drag and Drop

The probability scale falls between ​
at lowest end and ​
​ at highest end

OR 0% and ​
percent
Drag these tiles and drop them in the correct blank above
0
1
100
50
26
1/2
5000
1000
8.2

4

​A way to describe probability using words

Likelihood

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5

Labelling

Place each word on the probability scale

Drag labels to their correct position on the image
Likely
Impossible
As likely as not
Certain
Unlikely

6

Impossible and Certain

Will or has happened

Probability = 1 (100%)

Certain

Can NEVER happen

Probability = 0 (0%)

Impossible

​Roll a 7 on a 6 sided die

​Roll a number less than 10 on a 6 sided die

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7

Multiple Choice

Question image
What is the probability of rolling 15 with a pair of dice?
1

impossible

2

unlikely

3

equally likely

4

likely

8

Match

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Match each event with its likelihood

impossible

Unlikely

As likely as not

Likely

Certain

A pig flying.

Picking a face card from a deck of cards.

Getting heads on a coin toss.

A sum greater than 4 when rolling 2 dice.

Rolling a number less than 7 on a die.

9

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When all outcomes are as equally likely

Theoretical Probability

​ALWAYS SIMPLIFY THE FRACTION !!!

10

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​Pulling a green marble?

What is the probability of...

11

Multiple Choice

Question image

What is the probability of pulling a blue marble?

1

410\frac{4}{10}

2

12\frac{1}{2}

3

23\frac{2}{3}

4

25\frac{2}{5}

12

Multiple Choice

Question image

What is the likelihood of pulling a blue marble?

1

certain

2

impossible

3

as likely as not

4

likely

5

unlikely

13

Multiple Choice

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What is the probability of spinning orange?

1

0

2

1/4

3

1/2

4

3/4

14

Multiple Choice

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What is the probability of the spinner landing on red?
1

5/12

2

7/12

3

5/5

4

5/10 or 1/2

15

Multiple Choice

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In a deck of cards, what is the likelihood of selecting an ace?
1

impossible

2

unlikely

3

as likely as unlikely

4

likely

16

Multiple Choice

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A die is rolled once.  What is the probability of rolling a number less than 3?

1

1/3

2

2/6

3

3/6

4

1/6

17

Multiple Choice

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Nerissa has 5 pink bows, 1 blue bow, and 4 purple bows in a box. She will randomly choose 1 bow from the box.

What is the probability Nerissa will choose a purple bow?

1

1/2

2

2/5

3

1/10

4

3/5

18

Reorder

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Lauren spins the spinner with 8-equal sized sections one time. Drag the tiles to arrange the events in order from least likely to most likely.

spinning a 4 or 5

spinning a 6

spinning an even number

spinning a number greater than 5

1
2
3
4

19

Multiple Choice

Question image
A bag contains 30 pieces of candy. There are 15 grape, 7 cherry, 3 lemon, 5 strawberry. What is the probability of drawing a lemon?
1

3

2

1/10

3

3/10

4

30%

20

Multiple Choice

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To play a game Benny must spin the spinner shown below. 

          What is the probability that the spinner will land on a number less than 7?

1

7/8

2

3/4

3

8/7

4

0

21

Experimental Probability

22

Theoretical vs Experimental Probability

23

Experimental Probability

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24

Multiple Choice

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The bar graph shows the results of spinning the spinner 200 times. What is the experimental probability of landing on a 3?

1
2
3
4

25

Multiple Choice

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The table shows the results of 50 rolls of a number cube. According to the data in the table, what was the experimental probability of rolling a 1? (Simplify if needed)

1
2
3
4

26

Multiple Choice

What happens to the experimental probability as the number of trials increases?

1

As more trials are completed, the experimental probability generally draws closer to the theoretical probability

2

As more trials are completed, the theoretical probability generally draws closer to the experimental probability

Probability

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What are the chances?

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