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8

Mathematics
Learner’s Module 11

This instructional material was collaboratively developed and


reviewed by educators from public and private schools,
colleges, and/or universities. We encourage teachers and
other education stakeholders to email their feedback,
comments, and recommendations to the Department of
Education at [email protected].

We value your feedback and recommendations.

Department of Education
Republic of the Philippines
Mathematics – Grade 8
Learner’s Module
First Edition, 2013
ISBN: 978-971-9990-70-3

Republic Act 8293, section 176 indicates that: No copyright shall subsist in
any work of the Government of the Philippines. However, prior approval of the
government agency or office wherein the work is created shall be necessary for
exploitation of such work for profit. Such agency or office may among other things,
impose as a condition the payment of royalties.

The borrowed materials (i.e., songs, stories, poems, pictures, photos, brand
names, trademarks, etc.) included in this book are owned by their respective
copyright holders. The publisher and authors do not represent nor claim ownership
over them.

Published by the Department of Education


Secretary: Br. Armin Luistro FSC
Undersecretary: Dr. Yolanda S. Quijano

Development Team of the Learner’s Module

Consultant: Maxima J. Acelajado, Ph.D.


Authors: Emmanuel P. Abuzo, Merden L. Bryant, Jem Boy B. Cabrella, Belen P.
Caldez, Melvin M. Callanta, Anastacia Proserfina l. Castro, Alicia R. Halabaso,
Sonia P. Javier, Roger T. Nocom, and Concepcion S. Ternida
Editor: Maxima J. Acelajado, Ph.D.
Reviewers: Leonides Bulalayao, Dave Anthony Galicha, Joel C. Garcia, Roselle
Lazaro, Melita M. Navarro, Maria Theresa O. Redondo, Dianne R. Requiza, and
Mary Jean L. Siapno
Illustrator: Aleneil George T. Aranas
Layout Artist: Darwin M. Concha
Management and Specialists: Lolita M. Andrada, Jose D. Tuguinayo, Jr.,
Elizabeth G. Catao, Maribel S. Perez, and Nicanor M. San Gabriel, Jr.

Department of Education-Instructional Materials Council Secretariat (DepEd-


IMCS)
Office Address: 2nd Floor Dorm G, PSC Complex, Meralco Avenue.
Pasig City, Philippines 1600
Telefax: (02) 634-1054, 634-1072
E-mail Address: [email protected]
Table of Contents
Unit 4

Module 11: Introduction to Probability ....................................................555


Module Map ....................................................................................................... 556
Pre-Assessment ................................................................................................ 557
Learning Goals .................................................................................................. 561

Lesson 1: Basic Concepts of Probability ....................................................... 562


Activity 1 ........................................................................................................ 562
Activity 2 ........................................................................................................ 563
Activity 3 ........................................................................................................ 654
Activity 4 ........................................................................................................ 566
Activity 5 ........................................................................................................ 567
Activity 6 ........................................................................................................ 570
Activity 7 ........................................................................................................ 570
Activity 8 ........................................................................................................ 572
Activity 9 ........................................................................................................ 573
Activity 10 ...................................................................................................... 576
Activity 11 ...................................................................................................... 577
Activity 12 ...................................................................................................... 577
Activity 13 ...................................................................................................... 578
Activity 14 ...................................................................................................... 579
Activity 15 ...................................................................................................... 580
Activity 16 ...................................................................................................... 581
Activity 17 ...................................................................................................... 583
Summary/Synthesis/Generalization ............................................................... 585
Glossary of Terms ........................................................................................... 585
References and Website Links Used in this Module ..................................... 586

iii
INTRODUCTION
TO PROBABILITY

I. INTRODUCTION AND FOCUS QUESTIONS


Do you think it is possible for you to determine the chance of occurrence of an
event?
Have you at a certain time asked yourself the following questions?

What are the possible What are my chances of getting the


routes that I can take correct answer in a True/False-type
in going to school? question? Multiple choice-type of
question?

Should I bring my umbrella


tomorrow?

How likely is it that I


will be called to recite
in our math class
today? Will I probably win in
this game?

How do you deal with these questions? Were you able to answer them with certainty?

In this module, you will learn more about the rich applications of the fundamental
counting principles and probability. Remember to search for the answer to the following
questions: How is the number of occurrences of an event determined? How does
knowledge of finding the likelihood of an event help you in your daily life?

II. LESSONS AND COVERAGE


In this module, you will examine the aforementioned questions when you study
the following lessons:
Lesson 1 – Basic Concepts of Probability
Lesson 2 – Probability of an Event: Experimental Probability and Theoretical Probability
Lesson 3 – Organizing Outcomes of an Event and the Fundamental Counting Principles
Lesson 4 – Problems Involving Probabilities of Events
555
In these lessons, you will learn to:
Lesson 1 Define experiment, outcomes, sample space, and event.
Lesson 2 Explain and interpret the probability of an event; and

Differentiate between an experimental probability and a theoretical


probability.
Lesson 3 Count the number of occurrences of an outcome in an experiment and
organize them using a table, tree diagram, systematic listing, and the
fundamental counting principles.
Lesson 4 Solve simple problems involving probabilities of events.

Module Map
Module Map
Here is a simple map of the lessons that will be covered in this module.

Probability

Basic Concepts

Experimental Theoretical
Probability Probability

Counting
Techniques

Problems Involving
Probability of Simple
Events

556
III. PRE-ASSESSMENT
Find out how much you already know about this module. Write the letter that you
think best answers the question. Please answer all items. After taking this short test, you
will see your score. Take note of the items that you were not able to answer correctly
and find for the right answers as you go through this module.

1. Which of the following DOES NOT belong to the group?

a. Chance
b. Interpretation
c. Possibilities
d. Uncertainty

2. All the possible outcomes that can occur when a coin is tossed twice are listed in
the box. What is the probability of having a head?
1
a.
4
HH
TH b. 1
2 10
PISO
APOLINARIO

TT HT 3
MABINI

ANDRES

c.
BONIFACIO

4 2013

d. 1

3. The local weather forecaster said that there is a 20% chance of rain tomorrow.
What is the probability that it will not rain tomorrow?

a. 0.2 b. 0.8 c. 20 d. 80

4. A relative-frequency distribution for scores in a 5-item test is provided in the table


below.

Score 0 1 2 3 4 5
Relative
0.105 0.316 0.352 0.180 0.043 0.004
Frequency

Suppose that the passing score is 4, what is the probability that a randomly
selected student failed the quiz?

a. 0.047 b. 0.575 c. 0.773 d. 0.953

557
5. A spinner with three equal divisions was spinned 1 000 times. The following
information was recorded. What is the probability of the spinner
landing on RED?

Outcome Blue Red Yellow
Spins 448 267 285

a. 27% b. 29% c. 45% d. 73%

6. Suppose you toss two fair coins once, how many possible outcomes are there?

a. 1 b. 2 c. 4 d. 8

7. A balanced die is rolled. What is the probability of rolling a number that is not 3?

a. 0 or 0 b. 1 c. 5 d. 6 or 1
6 6 6 6
8. In a 500-ticket draw for an educational prize, Ana’s name was written on 41 tickets.
What is the probability that she would win?

a. 0.082 b. 0.122 c. 0.41 d. 0.82

9. Which of the following is TRUE?

a. Answering a true/false-type question has one possible outcome.


b. Flipping a coin thrice has 3 possible outcomes.
c. The probability of getting a head when a coin is tossed can be expressed
as 1 , 0.5 or 50%.
2
d. The probability of rolling 7 in a die is 1 .
7
10. The weather forecaster has announced that Region 1 has rainy (R), partly cloudy
(PR), and cloudy (C) weather. If the chance of having R is twice as the probability
of PR which is 2 , what is the correct table for probability?
7
a.
Outcome R PR C c. Outcome R PR C
Probability 1 4 2 Probability 4 2 1
7 7 7 7 7 7

Outcome R PR C Outcome R PR C
b. d.
Probability 1 2 4 Probability 4 1 2
7 7 7 7 7 7

11. A glass jar contains 40 red, green, blue, and yellow marbles. The probability of
drawing a single green marble at random is 1 . What does this mean?
5

558
a. There are 5 green marbles in the glass jar.
b. There are 8 green marbles in the glass jar.
c. There are more green marbles than the others.
d. There is only one green marble in the glass jar.

12. In a restaurant, you have a dinner choice of one main dish, one vegetable, and
one drink. The choices for main dish are pork and chicken meat. The vegetable
choices are broccoli and cabbage. The drink choices are juice and water. How
many choices are possible?

a. 8 b. 10 c. 12 d. 14

13. Arlene Joy got coins from her pocket which accidentally rolled on the floor. If there
were 8 possible outcomes, how many coins fell on the floor?

a. 3 b. 4 c. 8 d. 16

14. In a family of 3 children, what is the probability that the middle child is a boy?

a. 1 b. 1 c. 1 d. 1
8 4 3 2
15. Jun rolls two dice. The first die shows a 5. The second die rolls under his desk and
he cannot see it. Now, what is the probability that both dice show 5?

a. 1 b. 1 c. 9 d. 1
36 6 36 3
16. Mrs. Castro asked her students to do an activity. Afterwards, her students noticed that
the experimental probability of getting tails is 48%, while the mathematical/theoretical
probability is 50%. Being an attentive student, how would you explain this to your
classmates?

a. The experimental probability is wrong.


b. We should always rely on mathematical/theoretical probability.
c. It is normal for experimental probabilities to vary from the theoretical
probabilities but for a large number of trials, the two will be very close.
d. It is abnormal for the experimental probabilities to differ from the mathematical/
theoretical probabilities because the results must be the same.

17. You decided to order a pizza but you have to choose the type of crust and the
toppings. If there are only 6 possible combinations of ordering a pizza, from which
of the following should you choose from?

a. Crust: thin or deep dish


Topping: cheese or pepperoni
b. Crust: thin or deep dish
Topping: cheese, bacon or pepperoni

559
c. Crust: thin or deep dish
Topping: cheese, bacon, sausage or pepperoni
d. Crust: thin or deep dish
Topping: cheese, bacon, sausage, pepperoni or hotdog

18. There are four teams in a basketball tournament. Team A has 25% chance of winning.
Team B has the same chance as Team D which has 5% more than team A. Team C
has half the chance of winning as team B. Which of the following has the correct table
of probabilities for winning the tournament?

a.
Team A B C D
Probability 25% 30% 15% 30%
of winning

b. Team A B C D
Probability 25% 20% 20% 35%
of winning

Team
c. A B C D
Probability 25% 15% 15% 45%
of winning

d. Team A B C D
Probability 25% 15% 10% 50%
of winning

19. You tossed a five-peso coin five times and you got heads each time. You tossed again
and still a head turned up. Do you think the coin is BIASED? Why?

a. I think the coin is biased because it favored the heads.


b. I think the coin is biased because it is expected to turn up tail for the next
experiments.
c. I think the coin is not biased because both faces of the coin have equal chances
of turning up.
d. I think the coin is not biased because the probability of turning heads up is 3
4
while that of tails is only 1 .
4
20. Your best friend asked you to accompany him to a carnival to play games of chances.
According to him, his horoscope states that he is so lucky that day and he wants to try
his luck at the carnival. How will you convince him not to go to the carnival?

a. I will ask him to review very well his notes on probability so that he can apply
them to a real-life situation like this.
b. I will tell him that what is written in the horoscope is sometimes true and sometimes
false so he would rather not go to the carnival.

560
c. I will give him instances wherein he could see the real picture of having a very
little chance of winning so that he will not be wasting his money and time.
d. I will convince him not to go to the carnival this time because we have to finish
first our project in Probability. Anyway, there will be other times to go and enjoy
all the games there.

LEARNING GOALS AND TARGETS:


• The learner demonstrates understanding of the basic concepts of probability.
• The learner is able to use precisely counting techniques and probability in solving
simple problems related to different fields of endeavour.

561
Lesson 1 Basic Concepts
of Probability

What to
What to Know
Know
Begin this module by assessing what you have learned on the basic mathematical
concepts and your skills in performing the different mathematical operations which may
help you understand the lessons on Probability. As you go through this module, think
of the following essential questions: How is the number of occurrences of an event
determined? How does knowledge of finding the likelihood of an event help you in
your daily life? To find the answer, perform each activity to the best of what you can.

A ctivity 1
ANSWER ALL YOU CAN!

Relate each illustration below with your day-to-day activities. Fill in the blanks with the
correct words that would make the following sentences meaningful.

EMILIO
AGUINALDO

2013 EMILIO
AGUINALDO

2013

Impossible Unlikely Even Chance Likely Certain

4 in 5 Chance
1 in 6 Chance

1. Now is your ____________ to change for the better.


2. I’m ___________ that you can do better than what is expected of you.
3. Given the chance to win in the Math contest, I prefer the ____________.
4. You and I have ___________ chance to succeed in life.

562
ES TIO 1. Are those
a. Howwords
did you familiar
come to upyou?
with your answer?

? 2. What How
particular topic comes
thatto your mind when you see for
thethe
words in
QU

NS
b. did you know the words are appropriate given
the illustration?
phrases?
3. What qualitative
c. When do we terms
usecan
the be used
word to express
“less”? probable
How about occurrences
“more”?
of events in life?
d. When does less really become more?
4. How else
e. Howcando youthe differentiate
possible occurrence
the meaningor likelihood of an
of “less” and event
“less be
than”?
expressed?
How are these terms used in Mathematics?
5. Based on the illustration, how do you describe probability?

You just tried describing probability which is the possibility of occurrences of events
in a man’s life, which can be expressed as a fraction, a decimal, or a percent. As you move
on to the next activity, your prior knowledge on the basic concepts of probability and the
fundamental counting principles will be elicited.

A ctivity 2
BUDGET…, MATTERS!

Use the illustration below to answer the following questions correctly.

1. How many shirts are there? _____


2. How many pairs of short pants are there?_____
3. How many pairs of long pants are there?_____
4. How many different outfits can you choose? _____

563
ES TIO 1. How else can you find the number of possible outcomes?
?
QU

NS
2. Did you find difficulty in choosing which to wear? Why?
3. Aside from comfort, what do you consider when you choose an
outfit?

Do the next activity to explore further on the basic concepts of probability and the
fundamental counting principles.

A ctivity 3 LET’S ROLL IT!

Analyze the problem carefully. Fill in the table correctly and answer the questions
that follow.

You are holding a die. Your seatmate is holding another die. If both of you roll the
dice at the same time, how many outcomes are possible?

Sides of a 1 2 3 4 5 6
Die
1
2 3, 2 6, 2
3
4
5
6 5, 6

ES TIO 1. If you roll a die once, how many outcomes are possible? _______

?
QU

NS

2. What are those outcomes? _______


3. How do we call those outcomes? _______
4. Rolling two dice simultaneously, how many outcomes are
possible?_______
5. How did you find the answer? _______

564
Life has a lot of uncertainties. Oftentimes, our decisions in life are done under
conditions of uncertainty. These are the probabilities of life.

What you will learn in the next section will also enable you to do the final project
which will involve you as a game analyst invited by the barangay officials to inform or
educate the community folks to be mindful of their chances of losing and winning in the
local carnivals so that they will not end up wasting too much of their time and money.

You will start by doing the next activities.

What to
What to Process
Process
Your goal in this section is to learn and understand the key concepts of probability
and the fundamental counting principle by conducting several experiments which would
lead you to differentiate experimental probability from theoretical probability.
As you move on, please be guided by the following questions: How is the number of
occurrences of an event determined? How does knowledge of finding the
likelihood of an event help you in your daily life?

The branch of mathematics that deals with uncertainly is the theory of probability.
Probability is a measure or estimation of how likely it is that an event will occur.
Activities such as tossing or flipping a coin or picking a card from a standard deck of
cards without looking which could be repeated over and over again and which have well-
defined results are called experiments. The results are called outcomes.

Illustration:

When you roll a balanced die once, there are 6 possible outcomes which are 1, 2, 3, 4,
5 or 6. “Getting an even number” includes 3 outcomes; these are ‘a 2’, ‘a 4’, and ‘a 6’. “Getting
an even number” is called an event.

The set of all possible outcomes of an experiment is the sample space or probability
space; and each individual outcome is a sample point.

Experiment Sample Space Sample Point


Flipping two coins HH, HT, TH, TT HH
Rolling a die 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 5
Rolling a coin and a die H1, H2, H3, H4, H5, H6
T3
simultaneously T1, T2, T3, T4, T5, T6

565
13 Diamonds, 13 Hearts, 13
Drawing a card from a deck Spades, 13 Clubs (Ace, 2,
Queen of Hearts
of 52 cards 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, Jack,
Queen, King)

“Queen” is not a sample point because there are four Queens which are four different
sample points in a deck of cards.

Examples:
a. Getting a TTT when flipping a coin thrice
b. Choosing a “Queen” from a deck of cards (any of the 4 Queens)
c. Getting an “odd number” (1, 3, or 5) when rolling a die

A ctivity 4
WORDS COME EASY!
(Group Activity)

Join Jayar and his friends perform the same experiment. Record EMILIO
AGUINALDO

each outcome of your experiment. Then, fill in the blanks using the basic
concepts of probability to complete the paragraph.
EMILIO
AGUINALDO

EMILIO
AGUINALDO
2013
2013

Jayar and his friends decided to find the number of times three heads
“HHH” would come up when flipping three five-peso coins simultaneously. Every time Jayar
and his friends flip the fair coins is an ____________. The ____________ that they are look-
ing for is to come up with three heads: {HHH}. The ____________ is the set of all possible
outcomes: {HHH}, {HTH} … {TTT}.

These are the results of their experiment. Complete the table.

Trial 1 Trial 2 Trial 3 Trial 4 Trial 5 Trial 6 Trial 7 Trial 8 Trial 9


Coin 1 H H T T H H T T T
Coin 2 T T T H T H T H T
Coin 3 T H T H T H H T T
Outcome HTT HTH
Is it
{HHH}? NO NO
YES or NO

In order to find all the ____________, they have to continue flipping the coins at least
30 times.

566
ES TIO 1. Were you able to complete the paragraph with the correct words?
2. Do the words come easy to you? Why?
?
QU

NS 3. After 9 trials, Jayar and his friends had 1 “HHH” event. Is the result of
the experiment close to what you have expected? What would have
they done to make it closer to what is expected?
4. In your group experiment, how many “HHH” events did you have? Is
the result of your experiment close to what is expected? Why?
5. What Jayar, his friends, and your group had performed uses
Experimental Probability. In your own understanding, how do you
define Experimental Probability?

A ctivity 5
WHAT IS THE PROBABILITY?
Probabilities can be solved theoretically in which each event is assumed to be equally
likely. Look carefully at the given set, then match column A with column B. Your answers will
help you understand the concept on the probability of an event.

Given: Set R = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12}

Column A Column B

The probability of having: a. 1 d. 6 or 1


_____ 1. a 10 12 12 2

_____ 2. a 13 b. 2 or 1 e. 6 or 1
_____ 3. odd numbers 12 6 12 12

_____ 4. even numbers c. 3 or 1 f. 0 or 0


_____ 5. an odd number divisible by 3 12 4 12
_____ 6. an even number divisible by 3

ES TIO 1. How many possible outcomes are there?

? 2. To have even numbers, how many favorable outcomes are there?


QU

NS

3. Considering your answers, how do you compute for the probability of


an event?
4. What formula can be used?
5. This activity uses Theoretical Probability. How do you define
Theoretical Probability?

To enrich your knowledge about the difference between Experimental Probability


and Theoretical Probability, you may visit these sites:

www.algebra-class.com/theoretical-probability.html
http://www.onlinemathlearning.com/theoretical-probability.html

567
Probability of Events

The probability of an event, P (event), is a number from 0 to 1 which tells how likely the
event is to happen.

Take a closer look at the probability line below.



Impossible Unlikely Even Chance Likely Certain

1 1 3
0 1
4 2 4
0 0.25 0.5 0.75 1
0% 25% 50% 75% 100%

Probability Rules

1.
The probability of any event is a number (either a fraction, a decimal, or a percent)
from 0 to 1.
Examples: The weather forecast shows a 70% rain.
P (rain) = 70%

2. If an event will never happen, then its probability is 0.


Example: When a single die is rolled, find the probability of getting an 8.
Since the sample space consists of 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6, it is impossible to get an 8.
Hence, P(8) = 0 = 0.
6
3. If an event is sure to happen, then the probability is 1.
Example: When a single die is rolled, what is the probability of getting a number
less than 7?
Since all the outcomes {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6} are less than 7,
P (number less than 7) = 6 = 1
6
4. The sum of the probabilities of all the outcomes in the sample space is 1.
Example:
In rolling a fair die, each outcome in the sample space has a probability of 1 .

Hence, the sum of the probabilities of the outcomes is 1. 6

If a fair coin is flipped, P(T) = 1 and P(H) = 1
2 2
If you flipped the coin ten times and got the following outcomes: H, H, H, T, H, T, T, H,
H, what is the probability that the last outcome will also be a Head (H)? How did you arrive at
your answer?

568
Number of favorable outcomes
P (event) = Number of all possible outcomes

Examples:
1. What is the probability of getting a HEART from a deck of cards?
P (heart) = 13 = 1
52 4
2. There are 20 marbles in a container: 4 are red, 5 are blue and 11 are yellow. What
is the probability that a blue marble will be picked?
P (blue marble) = 5 = 1
20 4
Sometimes, getting an event affects the outcome of another event. Take a look at these
examples:

1. Five red candies are left in a bag of 40 different colored candies.

red

red
red
red
red

a. What is the probability that you will get a red candy?


How did you get your answer?
b. What are your chances of getting a red one when you pick again? Why?
How many candies are now in the bag?
How many red candies are there?

Getting the next candy without replacement is affected by the result of


the first attempt. Every time you get a piece of candy from a bag, the chance
of getting a red one will change. These are called dependent events.

2. Flipping a Coin

a. When you flip a coin, what is the probability of a


head landing up?

1
PISO
b. If you flip it again, what is the probability of getting a
tail?
JOSE RIZAL

2013 The two events do not affect each other. They are
independent events.

569
A ctivity 6
LET’S TAKE AN ACTIVITY TOGETHER
(Group Activity)

Gather data on the number of typhoons that hit the country in the previous year. Using
the basic concepts of probability, come up with a report showing the estimated chances of a
typhoon hitting the country for each month.

The report should contain the following:

1. Representation of collected data.

2. Process of coming up with the estimated probabilities.

3. Explanation on what type of probabilities is generated in the task.

Rubric for the Written Group Report

4 3 2 1
Representation Is complete, Is complete and Is complete but Is incomplete
of Data and organized, organized disorganized and
Explanation and clear disorganized
Has correct and Has correct Has illustration Has no
Process/ appropriate illustration or or illustration
Computation illustration or solution with solution but has or solution
solution minor error errors

A ctivity 7
SEE MY PROB-ABILITY!
(Quiz)

Solve the following carefully, then write the correct answer on the space provided before
each number.

_____ 1. Earl Darenz is asked to choose a day from a week. What is the probability
of choosing a day which starts with S?

_____ 2. Choosing a month from a year, what is the probability of selecting a month
with 31 days?

570
_____ 3 . If a letter is chosen at random from the word PERSEVERANCE, what is the
probability that the letter chosen is E?

_____4. If one letter is chosen at random from the word TRUSTWORTHY, what is
the probability that the letter chosen is a consonant?

_____ 5. The sides of a cube are numbered 11 to 16. If Jan Renz rolled the cube
once, what is the probability of rolling a composite number?

_____ 6. A box contains 7 red balls, 5 orange balls, 4 yellow balls, 6 green balls, and
3 blue balls. What is the probability of drawing out an orange ball?

_____7. Of the 45 students in a class, 25 are boys. If a student is selected at random


for a field trip, what is the probability of selecting a girl?

_____ 8. Two fair coins are tossed simultaneously. What is the probability of showing
a tail (T) followed by a head (H)?

_____ 9. A spinner is divided equally and numbered as follows: 1, 1, 2, 3, 3, 4, 1, 1, 2,


4, 1, 2, 3, 4, 1, 2. What is the probability that the pointer will stop at an even
prime?

_____ 10. What is the probability of getting an 8 from a deck of 52 cards?

In the next activity, you will discover how useful the Fundamental Counting
Principle is. This principle is all about choices you can make given many possibilities.

571
A ctivity 8
COUNT AND ANSWER…
Read the following situations carefully then answer all the questions that may lead you
to understand the fundamental counting principle.

1. On a Saturday morning, you washed most of your clothes and they are still wet.
Your friend invites you to attend his birthday party and you are left with only 2 pants
and 3 shirts. In how many different ways can you dress? Make a tree diagram to
show all the choices you can make.

ES TIO a. How many choices do you have for pants? _____________

?
QU

NS

b. How many choices for shirts are there? _____________


c. Draw a tree diagram to show the number of choices.
d. How many branches are there in the tree diagram? _____________
e. How are the branches of the tree diagram related to the number of
choices that you can make? Therefore, in how many different ways
can you dress? _____________
f. You have 2 choices for pants and 3 choices for shirts. What should
you do with the two tasks to get the answer easily and quickly?
______________

2. You go to a restaurant to buy some breakfast. The menu says, for food: pancakes,
waffles, or home fries; and for drinks: coffee, juice, hot chocolate, and tea. How
many different choices of food and drink do you have? Illustrate the choices by
using the table below.

Coffee Juice Hot chocolate Tea


Food/Drinks
(C) (J) (H) (T)

Pancake (P) PC PT

Waffles (W) WJ

Fries (F) FH

572
ES TIO a. How many choices for food are there?
?
QU

NS b. How many choices for drinks are there?


c. By counting, how many different choices of food and drink do you
have?
d. If the number of choices for food is f and d for drinks, what expression
helps you find the answer quickly and correctly?

Should you want to have more examples on using the Fundamental Counting
Principle to determine the sample space, watch the video in this site:
http://www.algebra-class.com/fundamental-counting-principle.html

To have more practice on finding the total possible outcomes, please visit this site:
http://www.aaaknow.com/sta-basic-cntg.htm

You can get the total number of possible outcomes by using a tree diagram or a table;
however, it is time consuming. You can use the Fundamental Counting Principle to easily
find the total outcomes by multiplying the outcomes for each individual event. Thus, if you
have f ways to do the first event and s ways to do the second event, then you can find the total
number of outcomes by multiplying f and s, that is (f)(s).

A ctivity 9
AN INDIVIDUAL REPORT
Choose any of the given tasks.

a. In a local hospital or clinic, do a research to determine the number of child births


for each month last year.

b. In your school, determine the number of absentees in a class per month during the
previous school year.

Use the basic concepts of probability to come up with a report showing the number of
occurrences.

The report should contain the following:

a. Representation of collected data

b. Process of coming up with the estimated probabilities

c. Explanation on what type of probabilities is used in the task

573
Rubric for the Written Individual Report

4 3 2 1

Representation It is complete, It is complete It is complete It is incomplete


of Data and organized and but and
Explanation and clear organized disorganized disorganized

Has correct and Has correct Has illustration


Process/ Has no
appropriate illustration or or
Computation illustration
illustration or solution with solution with
or solution
solution minor errors major errors

Great job! I’m certain you are ready to move on…

In this section, the discussion was about the basic concepts of probability, experimental
probability and theoretical probability, and the fundamental counting principles.

Go back to the previous section and compare your initial ideas with the discussion. How
much of your initial ideas are found in the discussion? Which ideas are different and need
revision?

Now that you know the important ideas about this topic, to the next section.

574
REFLECTION

_ _ _ _ _ ____
_ _ _ _ _ _____ _ _ ____
_ _ _ _ _ _
s o f ar...__ ___________ _______
e arne d
_ _ ___ _ _ ____
t I h a v e l
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ ____
______ __________ __________ _______
Wh a
_ _ _ _ _
_____
_ _ _ _ _ ______ __________ __________ _____
_ __ __ _
______ __________ __________ ___________ ____
__ __ __ __
______ __________ __________ ___________ ____
__ __ __ __
______ __________ __________ ___________ ____
__ __ __ __
______ __________ __________ ___________ ____
__ __ __ __
______ __________ __________ ___________ ____
__ __ __ __
______ __________ __________ ___________ ____
__ __ __ __
______ __________ __________ ___________
__ __ __
______ __________ __________ _________.
__ __ _
______ __________ ___________
__ __
______ __________
__
______

575
What to
What to Understand
Understand
Your goal in this section is to take a closer look at some aspects of the topic.
I’m certain that you are now ready to answer the different exercises to have a deeper
understanding of what you have learned. As you continue answering the next activities,
please search for the answer to the following questions:

How is the number of occurrences of an event determined? How


does knowledge of finding the likelihood of an event help you in making
decisions?

A ctivity 10
TOSS ME UP!

Read the problem carefully then answer the questions that follow.

Jann has a 5-peso coin in his pocket.

1. He tosses the coin twice.


EMILIO

a. How many possible outcomes are there? _____


AGUINALDO

2013
b. What are those possible outcomes? _____

c. What is the probability of both tails turning up? _____

2. He tosses the coin thrice.

a. How many possible outcomes are there? _____

b. What are those possible outcomes? _____

c. What is the probability of getting at least two heads? _____

576
A ctivity 11
LET’S TOSS AND ENJOY…
Play “Snake and Ladder” with a friend, then answer the questions below.

1. Roll the die once.


a. How many possible outcomes are there? _______
b. What are those outcomes? _______
c. If you want to move ahead 4 spaces on the board, then what is the probability
of rolling a 4? _______
d. If your friend wants to move ahead 8 spaces on the board, then what is the
probability of rolling an 8?_____ Why? _____

2. Roll the die twice.


a. How many possible outcomes are there? _______
b. What is the probability of having “doubles”? _______
c. What is the probability of getting a set of outcomes whose sum is greater
than 10? ______

A ctivity 12
MY FATHER SOLVED WITH ME
Parents love working with their children. At home, invite your father or
mother to toss an icosahedron which has congruent faces numbered 1 to
20 then read and answer together all the questions that follow.

Your father rolled the icosahedron once.


1. How many possible outcomes are there? _______
2. What are those possible outcomes? ______________________
3. What is the probability that the face which lands up is 25? _______
How will you interpret your answer? _______________________________
4. What is the probability that the face which lands up is an odd number? _______
5. What is the probability that the face which lands up is an even number divisible by
4? ______
6. What is the probability that the face which lands up is a positive number?
How did you arrive at your answer? Explain. ___________________________

577
A ctivity 13
I’M DREAMING OF A NEW CELL PHONE
Analyze carefully the problem, then answer what is asked for.

One of your dreams is to have a new cell phone. You went to a cell phone dealer and
he gave you the following options. How many available cell phones could you choose from?

Brands:

L O V E

Colors: white (W), red (R), yellow (Y), gray (G), blue (B)
Models: X, K, P

ES TIO 1. How many brands are there? ____________


2. How many colors are available? ____________
?
QU

NS

3. How many models are given? ____________


4. Show the tree diagram which can be used to find the total number
of choices.

5. Based on the illustration, how many available cell phones could you
choose from? _________
6. By doing simple calculation, how will you get the total number of
choices?
Write the correct expression, then solve for the total choices.
Expression Solution

578
A ctivity 14
MATCH ME WITH THE PROBABILITY SCALE
Match the following with each letter on the probability line. Number 1 is done for you.

a b c d e
Impossible Unlikely Even Chance Likely Certain

0 0.25 0.5 0.75 1

e 1. There are 7 days in a week.


____ 2. Out of 20 items, Jann got 15.
____ 3. In the Philippines, it will snow in March.
____ 4. If you flip a coin, it will come down heads.
____ 5. All months of the year have 28 days.
____ 6. It will be daylight in Manila at midnight.
____ 7. The day before Monday is Sunday.
____ 8. Of the 40 seedlings, only 10 survived.
____ 9. Next year, the month after November has 30 days.
____ 10. The third person to knock on the door will be a female.
____ 11. The chance that the last outcome in rolling a number cube is an even number.

In this section, the discussion was about problems involving probabilities of events
and fundamental counting principles.

What new realizations do you have about the topic? What new connections have you
made for yourself?

Now that you have a deeper understanding of the topic, you are ready to do the tasks
in the next section.

What to
What to Transfer
Transfer

Your goal in this section is to apply your learning to real life situations. You will be
given practical tasks which will demonstrate your understanding. After answering a lot of
exercises, I’m sure you’re now ready to give your insights on the following questions:

How is the number of occurrences of an event determined? How does
knowledge of finding the likelihood of an event help you in making decisions?

579
A ctivity 15 LET’S HELP THEM ENJOY THEIR
VACATION IN BORA!
Read the following carefully then perform the task diligently.

The family plans for a three-day summer vacation in Boracay. The challenge is to present
variety of transportation packages within the allotted budget of the family. Create a variety of
transportation options for the family to choose from. Explain how you arrived at these options.

Rubric on the Group Work for Transportation Packages

4 3 2 1
Neat, readable,
correctly labeled
Neat, readable,
diagram, and
correctly labeled Readable
has a very
Visual Appeal diagram, and and correctly Messy
creative
has a creative labeled
design that
design
enhances the
diagram
Detailed but with
Computation of Correct and Detailed but with
major Not detailed
Charge detailed minor errors
errors
Based on sound
Based on Based on mathematical
Based on
Proposal correct equation mathematical reasoning
guessing
and computation computation without
computation

580
A ctivity 16
LET’S CONVINCE THE COMMUNITY!
Situation:
The barangay officials want the community folks especially the students and youth to
be informed/educated about engaging in games of chance (those found in the local
carnivals). They invited a game analyst to convince the people in the community that they
should be mindful of their chances of losing and winning in these types of games so that
they will not end up wasting their time and money. The game analyst needs to present
and disseminate this during the barangay monthly meeting. The presentation should
meet the following standards: use of mathematical concepts, accuracy, organization,
and delivery. Please refer to the Performance Task rubrics.

Activity:
Consider yourself as the game analyst invited by the barangay officials to make an
educational presentation on how to convince the community folks of their chances in
losing and winning in those games in the local carnival. The presentation should meet
the set standards.

Goal:
The problem or challenge is to inform/educate the people, especially the students and
youth in a community about engaging in games of chance (those found in the local
carnivals and the like).

Role:
You are a game analyst invited by the barangay officials.

Audience:
The target audience are the barangay officials and the people in the community.

Situation:
You need to convince the people in the community that they should be mindful of their
chances of losing and winning in these types of games so that they would not end up
wasting too much of their time and money.

Product/Performance:
You need to create a presentation for the monthly barangay/community forum/meeting
in order to disseminate the information.

Standards:
The presentation should meet the following standards: use of mathematical concepts,
accuracy, organization, and delivery.

581
PERFORMANCE TASK RUBRICS
OUTSTANDING SATISFACTORY DEVELOPING BEGINNING
CRITERIA
4 3 2 1
USE OF It shows in-depth It shows It shows some It shows no
MATHEMATICAL understanding understanding understanding understanding
CONCEPTS of the required of required of the required of the problem,
mathematical mathematical mathematical perhaps only
knowledge in knowledge. The knowledge. re-copying the
probability. The solution addresses The solution given data.
solution completely most of the addresses The solution
addresses all mathematical some of the addresses
mathematical components mathematical none of the
components presented in the task. components mathematical
presented in the presented in the components
task. task. required to
solve the task.
ACCURACY 100% of the steps Almost all (85 - 89%) Most (75-84%) More than 75%
and solutions have of the steps and of the steps and of the steps
no mathematical solutions have no solutions have and solutions
errors. mathematical errors. no mathematical have
errors. mathematical
errors.
ORGANIZATION It uses an It uses a complete It uses an It has no
appropriate and strategy for solving inappropriate particular
complete strategy for the problem. It uses strategy or strategy for
solving the problem. creative diagrams application solving the
It uses clear and and/or tables. of strategy is problem. It
effective diagrams unclear. There does not show
and/or tables. is limited use use of diagrams
or misuse of nor tables.
diagrams and/or
tables.
DELIVERY There is a clear and There is a clear There is an There is no
effective explanation explanation incomplete explanation of
of the solution. All and appropriate explanation; it the solution.
steps are included use of accurate is not clearly The explanation
so the audience mathematical represented. cannot be
does not have to representation. There is understood, or
infer how the task There is effective some use of is unrelated to
was completed. use of mathematical appropriate the task. There
Mathematical terminology. mathematical is no use or
representation representation inappropriate
is actively used and terminology use of
as a means of for the task. mathematical
communicating representation
ideas, and precise and terminology
and appropriate for the task.
mathematical
terminology.

582
A ctivity 17
REFLECTION JOURNAL

In this module, you learned concepts which helped you accomplished the different
tasks successfully. This time, kindly answer this activity which would show how important this
module is in your day-to-day activities.

In this module, I learned about

I can use these concepts

These are very important because

I understand that

I can use the basic concepts of probability and the fundamental counting principles
in my day-to-day activities by

In this section, your task was to apply what you have learned in this module in real-
life situation.

How did you find the performance task? How did the task help you see the real world
use of the topic?

You have completed this lesson in probability. Before you go for a summer vacation,
you have to answer the following post–assessment.

583
REFLECTION

_ _ _ _ _ ____
t h at _____ _ _ ____
o d _ _ _
v e u n dersto __________ _______
s on , I ha _ _ _ _ _ ___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ______
l e s _ _ _ _ _ _
In this ___________ __________ ___________ ____
_ __ __ __
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __________ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ __ __ __
_ _ _ _ _ _ __________ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
__ __ __ __
______ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ __ __ __
______ ___________ __________ __________ ____
_ __ __ __
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____
_ __ __ __
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___________ _ _ _ _
_ __ __ __
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __________ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____
_ __ __ __
_ _ _ _ _ _ __________ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___________ _ _ _ _
__ __ __ __
______ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __________ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ __ __
_ _ _ _ _ _ __________ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
__ __
______ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
______ ___.
__
______

584
SUMMARY/SYNTHESIS/GENERALIZATION

This module was about the basic concepts of probability and the fundamental counting
principles. In this module, you were encouraged to discover by yourself the operational definition
of concepts, the difference between experimental probability and theoretical probability and
the importance of the fundamental counting principle. The knowledge and computational skills
gained in this module help you solve real-life problems involving probabilities of events which
would lead you to make better decisions in life and to perform practical tasks at your best.

GLOSSARY OF TERMS USED IN THIS MODULE:

Certain refers to an event which has to happen.

Chance refers to the“ likelihood” that something will happen.

Dependent events are events in which one event affects the outcome of another.

Die is a small cube whose faces are marked with dots of 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 in each of the 6
faces.

Equally likely events are events that have the same probability of occurring.

Experiment activities such as tossing or flipping a coin, rolling a die, or picking a card from
a standard deck of cards without looking which could be repeated over and over again and
which have well-defined results.

Experimental probability is the probability of an outcome of an event based on an experiment.


The more trials done in an experiment, the closer the experimental probability gets to the
theoretical probability.

Fundamental Counting Principle states that we can find the total number of ways different
events can occur by multiplying the number of ways each event can happen. If we have x
ways of doing event 1, y ways of doing event 2, and z ways of doing event 3, then we can
find the total number of ways of doing events1, 2, and 3 by getting the product of x, y, and z.

Icosahedron is a three-dimensional geometric figure made up of 20 sides or faces.

Impossible refers to an event which will never happen.

Independent events are two events which do not affect the outome of each other.

Outcomes are the results of experiments.

585
Probability is branch of mathematics that deals with uncertainty. It is a measure or estimation
of how likely it is that an event will occur.

Probability Rules:

1. The probability of any event is a number (either a fraction, a decimal, or a percent)


between and including 0 and 1.

2. If an event will never happen, then its probability is 0.

3. If an event is sure to happen, then the probability is 1.

4. The sum of the probabilities of all the outcomes in the sample space is 1.

Sample point is an individual outcome in the sample space.

Sample space or probability space in the set of all possible outcomes of an experiment.

Theoretical probability is the probability that a certain outcome will occur as determined
through reasoning or calculation.

Tree diagram is a device consisting of line segments emanating from a starting point and from
the outcome point. It is used to determine all possible outcomes of a probability experiment.

Uncertain refers to something which is likely to change, and therefore not reliable or stable.

Unlikely refers to something which is not likely to occur, not likely to be true or be believed.

REFERENCES AND WEBSITE LINKS USED IN THIS LESSON:

REFERENCES

Acelajado, Maxima J. ( 2008 ). Intermediate Algebra. pp.319 -326. Makati City, Philippines.
Diwa Learning Systems Inc.

Basilio, Faith B., Chua, Edna A., Jumawan, Maria T., Mangabat, Lawrence Oliver A., Mendo-
za, Mario B., Pacho, Elsie M., Tamoria, Ferdinand V., Villena, Eufrosina S.,Vizcarra, Florante
O., Yambao, Teresa M. (2003). Fundamental Statistics. Philippines. pp. 129 -133. Trinitas
Publishing Inc.

Garcia, George A. (2003). Fundamental Concepts and Methods in Statistics (Part 1). pp. 4 – 9.
Manila, Philippines. University of Sto. Tomas Publishing House.

586
Garcia, George A. (2004). Fundamental Concepts and Methods in Statistics (Part 2). pp. 8 – 43.
Manila, Philippines. University of Sto. Tomas Publishing House.

Glencoe/McGRAW-HILL. (1986). Mathematics Skills for Daily Living. pp. 397 - 411. United
States of America. Laidlaw Brothers, Publishers.

Price, Jack/ Rath, James N./ Leschensky, William.(1989). Pre- Algebra, A Problem Solving
Approach. pp. 420 – 430. Columbus, Ohio. Merrill Publishing Co.

WEBSITE LINKS

Copyright 2011MathsIsFun.com
www.mathsisfun.com/definitions/probability.html
These sites provide the picture of the probability line and definitions of the basic concepts.

http://intmath.com/counting-probability/2-basic-principles-counting.php
This site provides the picture for Activity 2, notes/tips on the basic counting principles.

http://whatis.techtarget.com/definition/probability
This site provides the definition of probability and other concepts.

www.algebra-clss.com/probability-problems.html
This site provides notes, pictures, and examples of independent/dependent events.

www.algebra-class.com/theoretical-probability.html
This site provides notes, pictures, and examples of Experimental Probability and Theoretical
Probability.

http://www.onlinemathlearning.com/theoretical-probability.html
This site provides a video lesson on experimental and theoretical probability.

www. Learningwave.com/chapters/probability/dependent_independent.html
This site provides examples of dependent and independent events,

http://www.mathworksheets4kids.com
This site provides exercises/ worksheets for the students to answer.

http://www.algebra-class.com/fundamental-counting-principle.html
This site provides the formula and examples of Fundamental Counting Principle.

www.virtualnerd.com/algebra-2/probability-statistics/fundamental-counting-principle-defini-
tion.php
This site provides a video lesson on Fundamental Counting Principle.

587
http://www.aaaknow.com/sta-basic-cntg.htm
This site provides notes on basic counting principles and practice exercises on finding the
total possible outcomes.

http:// mathgoodies.com/lessons/vol16/intro-probability.html
This site provides examples and items for the Pre/Post Assessment.

http:// www.mathwire.com/games/datagames.html
This site provides enrichment games on Probability.
This site provides the formula and examples of Fundamental Counting Principle.

www.virtualnerd.com/algebra-2/probability-statistics/fundamental-counting-principle-defini-
tion.php
This site provides a video lesson on Fundamental Counting Principle.

588

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