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Use one sheet of your own paper. Quiz procedure Print your name legibly at the top left corner. Sign your name below your printed name. Joe Schafer.

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Presentation on theme: "Use one sheet of your own paper. Quiz procedure Print your name legibly at the top left corner. Sign your name below your printed name. Joe Schafer."— Presentation transcript:

1 Use one sheet of your own paper. Quiz procedure Print your name legibly at the top left corner. Sign your name below your printed name. Joe Schafer

2 Quiz procedure When the quiz questions are displayed, write brief answers on your sheet. You will have two minutes. When you are finished, do not leave this room. When the time is up, pass completed quizzes to your left. The left-most person in each row will pass them down to the front of the room. The left-most person in the front row will hand them to me. When I have the quizzes, you may leave the room.

3 2:00Quiz for Lecture 26 For each situation below, state whether it is based on the Relative Frequency (RF) or Personal Probability (PP) interpretation of probability. (A) There’s a 60% chance that George Mason will beat Florida in basketball this Saturday. (B) If you draw a single card from a deck, the probability of getting a face card (Jack, Queen or King) is 3/13 = 0.23 (C) The chance of rain tomorrow is 40%.

4 1:50Quiz for Lecture 26 For each situation below, state whether it is based on the Relative Frequency (RF) or Personal Probability (PP) interpretation of probability. (A) There’s a 60% chance that George Mason will beat Florida in basketball this Saturday. (B) If you draw a single card from a deck, the probability of getting a face card (Jack, Queen or King) is 3/13 = 0.23 (C) The chance of rain tomorrow is 40%.

5 1:40Quiz for Lecture 26 For each situation below, state whether it is based on the Relative Frequency (RF) or Personal Probability (PP) interpretation of probability. (A) There’s a 60% chance that George Mason will beat Florida in basketball this Saturday. (B) If you draw a single card from a deck, the probability of getting a face card (Jack, Queen or King) is 3/13 = 0.23 (C) The chance of rain tomorrow is 40%.

6 1:30Quiz for Lecture 26 For each situation below, state whether it is based on the Relative Frequency (RF) or Personal Probability (PP) interpretation of probability. (A) There’s a 60% chance that George Mason will beat Florida in basketball this Saturday. (B) If you draw a single card from a deck, the probability of getting a face card (Jack, Queen or King) is 3/13 = 0.23 (C) The chance of rain tomorrow is 40%.

7 1:20Quiz for Lecture 26 For each situation below, state whether it is based on the Relative Frequency (RF) or Personal Probability (PP) interpretation of probability. (A) There’s a 60% chance that George Mason will beat Florida in basketball this Saturday. (B) If you draw a single card from a deck, the probability of getting a face card (Jack, Queen or King) is 3/13 = 0.23 (C) The chance of rain tomorrow is 40%.

8 1:10Quiz for Lecture 26 For each situation below, state whether it is based on the Relative Frequency (RF) or Personal Probability (PP) interpretation of probability. (A) There’s a 60% chance that George Mason will beat Florida in basketball this Saturday. (B) If you draw a single card from a deck, the probability of getting a face card (Jack, Queen or King) is 3/13 = 0.23 (C) The chance of rain tomorrow is 40%.

9 1:00Quiz for Lecture 26 For each situation below, state whether it is based on the Relative Frequency (RF) or Personal Probability (PP) interpretation of probability. (A) There’s a 60% chance that George Mason will beat Florida in basketball this Saturday. (B) If you draw a single card from a deck, the probability of getting a face card (Jack, Queen or King) is 3/13 = 0.23 (C) The chance of rain tomorrow is 40%.

10 0:50Quiz for Lecture 26 For each situation below, state whether it is based on the Relative Frequency (RF) or Personal Probability (PP) interpretation of probability. (A) There’s a 60% chance that George Mason will beat Florida in basketball this Saturday. (B) If you draw a single card from a deck, the probability of getting a face card (Jack, Queen or King) is 3/13 = 0.23 (C) The chance of rain tomorrow is 40%.

11 0:40Quiz for Lecture 26 For each situation below, state whether it is based on the Relative Frequency (RF) or Personal Probability (PP) interpretation of probability. (A) There’s a 60% chance that George Mason will beat Florida in basketball this Saturday. (B) If you draw a single card from a deck, the probability of getting a face card (Jack, Queen or King) is 3/13 = 0.23 (C) The chance of rain tomorrow is 40%.

12 0:30Quiz for Lecture 26 For each situation below, state whether it is based on the Relative Frequency (RF) or Personal Probability (PP) interpretation of probability. (A) There’s a 60% chance that George Mason will beat Florida in basketball this Saturday. (B) If you draw a single card from a deck, the probability of getting a face card (Jack, Queen or King) is 3/13 = 0.23 (C) The chance of rain tomorrow is 40%.

13 0:20Quiz for Lecture 26 For each situation below, state whether it is based on the Relative Frequency (RF) or Personal Probability (PP) interpretation of probability. (A) There’s a 60% chance that George Mason will beat Florida in basketball this Saturday. (B) If you draw a single card from a deck, the probability of getting a face card (Jack, Queen or King) is 3/13 = 0.23 (C) The chance of rain tomorrow is 40%.

14 0:10Quiz for Lecture 26 For each situation below, state whether it is based on the Relative Frequency (RF) or Personal Probability (PP) interpretation of probability. (A) There’s a 60% chance that George Mason will beat Florida in basketball this Saturday. (B) If you draw a single card from a deck, the probability of getting a face card (Jack, Queen or King) is 3/13 = 0.23 (C) The chance of rain tomorrow is 40%.

15 0:09Quiz for Lecture 26 For each situation below, state whether it is based on the Relative Frequency (RF) or Personal Probability (PP) interpretation of probability. (A) There’s a 60% chance that George Mason will beat Florida in basketball this Saturday. (B) If you draw a single card from a deck, the probability of getting a face card (Jack, Queen or King) is 3/13 = 0.23 (C) The chance of rain tomorrow is 40%.

16 0:08Quiz for Lecture 26 For each situation below, state whether it is based on the Relative Frequency (RF) or Personal Probability (PP) interpretation of probability. (A) There’s a 60% chance that George Mason will beat Florida in basketball this Saturday. (B) If you draw a single card from a deck, the probability of getting a face card (Jack, Queen or King) is 3/13 = 0.23 (C) The chance of rain tomorrow is 40%.

17 0:07Quiz for Lecture 26 For each situation below, state whether it is based on the Relative Frequency (RF) or Personal Probability (PP) interpretation of probability. (A) There’s a 60% chance that George Mason will beat Florida in basketball this Saturday. (B) If you draw a single card from a deck, the probability of getting a face card (Jack, Queen or King) is 3/13 = 0.23 (C) The chance of rain tomorrow is 40%.

18 0:06Quiz for Lecture 26 For each situation below, state whether it is based on the Relative Frequency (RF) or Personal Probability (PP) interpretation of probability. (A) There’s a 60% chance that George Mason will beat Florida in basketball this Saturday. (B) If you draw a single card from a deck, the probability of getting a face card (Jack, Queen or King) is 3/13 = 0.23 (C) The chance of rain tomorrow is 40%.

19 0:05Quiz for Lecture 26 For each situation below, state whether it is based on the Relative Frequency (RF) or Personal Probability (PP) interpretation of probability. (A) There’s a 60% chance that George Mason will beat Florida in basketball this Saturday. (B) If you draw a single card from a deck, the probability of getting a face card (Jack, Queen or King) is 3/13 = 0.23 (C) The chance of rain tomorrow is 40%.

20 0:04Quiz for Lecture 26 For each situation below, state whether it is based on the Relative Frequency (RF) or Personal Probability (PP) interpretation of probability. (A) There’s a 60% chance that George Mason will beat Florida in basketball this Saturday. (B) If you draw a single card from a deck, the probability of getting a face card (Jack, Queen or King) is 3/13 = 0.23 (C) The chance of rain tomorrow is 40%.

21 0:03Quiz for Lecture 26 For each situation below, state whether it is based on the Relative Frequency (RF) or Personal Probability (PP) interpretation of probability. (A) There’s a 60% chance that George Mason will beat Florida in basketball this Saturday. (B) If you draw a single card from a deck, the probability of getting a face card (Jack, Queen or King) is 3/13 = 0.23 (C) The chance of rain tomorrow is 40%.

22 0:02Quiz for Lecture 26 For each situation below, state whether it is based on the Relative Frequency (RF) or Personal Probability (PP) interpretation of probability. (A) There’s a 60% chance that George Mason will beat Florida in basketball this Saturday. (B) If you draw a single card from a deck, the probability of getting a face card (Jack, Queen or King) is 3/13 = 0.23 (C) The chance of rain tomorrow is 40%.

23 0:01Quiz for Lecture 26 For each situation below, state whether it is based on the Relative Frequency (RF) or Personal Probability (PP) interpretation of probability. (A) There’s a 60% chance that George Mason will beat Florida in basketball this Saturday. (B) If you draw a single card from a deck, the probability of getting a face card (Jack, Queen or King) is 3/13 = 0.23 (C) The chance of rain tomorrow is 40%.

24 Time’s up! Pass the completed quizzes to your left. Left-most person: Pass them down to the front. When I have the quizzes, you may leave the room. See you on Friday.

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