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Chapter 11 and 12 Review JEOPARDY -Algebra 2-.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 11 and 12 Review JEOPARDY -Algebra 2-."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 11 and 12 Review JEOPARDY -Algebra 2-

2 Sequences and Series Arithmetic Sequences and Series Geometric Sequences and Series Counting Principles Probability 100 200 300 400 500

3 Sequences and Series 100 Determine if the following sequences are arithmetic, geometric, or neither , -5, -1, 3, … 2. 0, 5, 15, 30, 50, … ½, 1, -2, 4, … Back

4 Write the first four terms of the sequence
Sequences and Series 200 Write the first four terms of the sequence Back

5 Write the first three terms of the sequence where a1 = -2.
Sequences and Series 300 Write the first three terms of the sequence where a1 = -2. Back

6 Sequences and Series 400 Find the sum Back

7 Sequences and Series 500 Write the following sum in sigma notation. [(1)2 – 5] + [(2)2 – 5] + [(3)2 – 5] + … + [(10)2 – 5] Back

8 Arithmetic Sequences and Series 100
Find the 20th term of the arithmetic sequence. 10, 5, 0, -5, -10, …. Back

9 Arithmetic Sequences and Series 200
Find the 19th term of the arithmetic sequence a1 = 5, a4 = 15 Back

10 Arithmetic Sequences and Series 300
Find the 1st term of the arithmetic sequence with a5 = 190 and a10 = 115. Back

11 Arithmetic Sequences and Series 400
Find the 1001st term of the sequence with a1 = -4 and a5 = 16. Back

12 Arithmetic Sequences and Series 500
Use the Gauss formula to find the sum of the first 30 terms of the sequence -30, -23, -16, -9, … Back

13 Geometric Sequences and Series 100
Find the 6th term of the geometric sequence with a1 = 64 and r = -1/4. Back

14 Geometric Sequences and Series 200
Find the 22nd term of the sequence 4, 8, 16, … Back

15 Geometric Sequences and Series 300
Find the sum of the infinite geometric sequence 6, 2, 2/3, …. Back

16 Geometric Sequences and Series 400
Find S10 for the sequence 7, 14, 28, … Back

17 Geometric Sequences and Series 500
Find S16 for the sequence 200, 50, 12.5, … Back

18 Counting Principles 100 In how many ways can a 7 question True-False exam be answered? Do you use permutations, combinations, or a slot-method to solve the problem? Back

19 Counting Principles 200 How many distinct license plates can be issued consisting of one letter followed by a three-digit number? (Suppose the numbers CAN repeat) Do you use permutations, combinations, or a slot-method to solve the problem? Back

20 Counting Principles 300 The Statistics class needs 10 students to answer a survey. Mrs. Cox has 15 students in her 4th period Algebra 2 class. In how many different ways can she choose the 10 students? Do you use permutations, combinations, or a slot-method to solve the problem? Back

21 Counting Principles 400 Compute the following without a calculator. 1. 6! 2. 7P2 3. 5C2 Back

22 Counting Principles 500 An exacta in horse racing is when you correctly guess which horses will finish first and second.   If there are eight horses in the race, how many different possible outcomes for the exacta are there? Do you use permutations, combinations, or a slot-method to solve the problem? Back

23 Probability 100 What are the odds of getting a “tails” when flipping a fair coin? What is the probability? Back

24 Probability 200 What is the probability you roll a 7 or 11 with a pair of dice? Back

25 Probability 300 What is the probability of getting a 100% on a 5 question multiple-choice test with options A, B, C, and D? Back

26 Probability 400 There is a raffle at the end of the year in Mrs. Cox’s class. When a name is drawn, it is placed back into the box. There are three prizes – an iPod worth $150, $100 in cash, and an iPad worth $800. To help offset the price of these items, she charges $10 for a ticket (the rest of the money was donated). Each of Mrs. Cox’s students gets one ticket. She has 65 students. What is the expected value? Should you participate in the raffle? Back

27 Probability 500 A bag contains 3 red, 4 green, 2 blue, and 1 purple candy. A piece of candy is selected, it is eaten, and then a second piece is selected. Draw a tree diagram. What is the probability of the following events? 1. P(2 red) 2. P(2 purple) 3. P(1 green and 1 blue) Back Back 27


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