Uniform Probability Models
Grade 7 students in Big Ideas Math Advanced 2 (Chapter 15: Probability and Statistics) learn about uniform probability models, where all outcomes have equal probability. In a uniform model with n outcomes, each has probability 1/n, and event probability = favorable outcomes / total outcomes.
Key Concepts
A uniform probability model assigns equal probability to all outcomes in the sample space. In a uniform model, if there are $n$ equally likely outcomes, then each outcome has probability $\frac{1}{n}$.
The probability of any event is calculated as: $$P(\text{event}) = \frac{\text{number of favorable outcomes}}{\text{total number of outcomes}}$$.
Common Questions
What is a uniform probability model in 7th grade?
A uniform probability model assigns equal probability to all outcomes. With n equally likely outcomes, each has probability 1/n. Rolling a fair die is a uniform model with P = 1/6 for each outcome.
How do you calculate probability in a uniform model?
P(event) = number of favorable outcomes / total number of outcomes. All outcomes must be equally likely for this formula to apply.
What is an example of a uniform probability model?
Rolling a fair six-sided die (each side has probability 1/6), flipping a fair coin (heads and tails each have probability 1/2), or randomly selecting one student from a class.
What chapter in Big Ideas Math Advanced 2 covers uniform probability models?
Chapter 15: Probability and Statistics in Big Ideas Math Advanced 2 (Grade 7) covers uniform probability models.
When does the basic probability formula not apply?
The formula P = favorable/total only works when outcomes are equally likely (uniform model). When outcomes have different probabilities, you need a different approach.