14 A teacher in a college asks her mathematics students what other subjects they are studying - AQA - A-Level Maths Mechanics - Question 14 - 2018 - Paper 3
Question 14
14 A teacher in a college asks her mathematics students what other subjects they are studying.
She finds that, of her 24 students:
12 study physics
8 study geogra... show full transcript
Worked Solution & Example Answer:14 A teacher in a college asks her mathematics students what other subjects they are studying - AQA - A-Level Maths Mechanics - Question 14 - 2018 - Paper 3
Step 1
Determine whether the event ‘the student studies physics’ and the event ‘the student studies geography’ are independent.
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Answer
To determine if the events are independent, we need to calculate the probabilities:
Calculate (P(\text{Physics})) and (P(\text{Geography})):
Since (P(\text{Physics} \cap \text{Geography}) = \frac{1}{6}), the events are independent.
Step 2
Calculate the probability that a student studies mathematics or biology or both.
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Answer
Let (P(M)) be the probability of studying mathematics, (P(B)) be the probability of studying biology, and (P(M \cap B)) be the probability of studying both:
Calculate (P(M) = \frac{1}{5}) and (P(B) = \frac{1}{6}).
To find (P(M \cap B)), we use the conditional probability formula:
(P(B | M) = \frac{P(M \cap B)}{P(M)}) therefore (P(M \cap B) = P(B | M) \times P(M))
Substitute (P(B | M) = \frac{3}{8}) and (P(M) = \frac{1}{5}):
(P(M \cap B) = \frac{3}{8} \times \frac{1}{5} = \frac{3}{40})
Use the addition rule to calculate (P(M \cup B)):
(P(M \cup B) = P(M) + P(B) - P(M \cap B))
Substitute the values:
(P(M \cup B) = \frac{1}{5} + \frac{1}{6} - \frac{3}{40})