If we can understand and describe the likelihood of different events occurring, then we can predict how likely they are to occur in the future.
We can use fractions and percentages to describe likelihood more precisely than words.

1. Copy and complete the sentences about the balls in the bag.

a. The probability of a red ball being pulled from the bag is $\frac{1}{4}$.
b. The probability of a yellow ball being pulled from the bag is $\frac{1}{4}$.
c. The probability of a green ball being pulled from the bag is $\frac{2}{4}$ or $\frac{1}{2}$.
2. Write the probability of each of these events occurring as a fraction and as a percentage.

a. taking a red card
b. taking a $2$
c. taking a card with a value higher than $4$
d. taking a card that is not a $3$
3. Draw sets of cards that match the descriptions.
a. There is a $25\%$ chance of taking an $8$.
b. The probability of taking a card with a value less than $5$ is $\frac{5}{6}$.
c. The chance of taking a $3$ is greater than the chance of taking a $1$.
d. There is a $70\%$ chance of taking a card with a value greater than $4$.
e. There is a $2$ out of $5$ chance of taking a $3$.
4. Keran flips a coin and records whether the coin lands heads up, or tails up.
These are her results:

a. How many trials did Keran carry out?
b. Does Keran’s experiment show that the coin is more likely to land heads up or tails up?
c. What does Keran’s experiments show is the experimental probability of the coin landing tails up?
5. Some children play a game with numbered tickets from $1$ to $30$. They take a ticket without looking. If their number is odd they win a small prize. If their number is a multiple of $10$ they win a medium prize. If their number is both odd and a multiple of $10$ then they win a big prize.

Copy and complete this Venn diagram with the numbers $1$ to $30$.

a. Shade red the section of the diagram with the numbers that would not win a prize.
b. Shade blue the section of the diagram with the numbers that would win a small prize.
c. Shade yellow the section of the diagram with the numbers that would win a medium prize.
d. What is the chance of winning a big prize? Why?
e. Are the events ‘taking an odd number’ and ‘taking a multiple of $10$’ mutually exclusive?
6. Look at the shapes in this bag.

Write ‘mutually exclusive’ or ‘not mutually exclusive’ for these pairs of events.
a. Taking shape that is red and taking a shape that is blue.
b. Taking shape that is red and taking a shape that is a cone.
c. Taking a shape with more than $5$ faces and taking a shape that is blue.
7. You have two six-sided dice. One is red and one is blue.

Imagine you are going to investigate these events:
Event A: You roll a double.
Event B: The sum of the two scores is even.
Event C: The score on the blue dice is greater than the score on the red dice.
Event D: You get a $6$ on the red dice.
a. Which events can happen at the same time?
i. A and B?
ii. A and C?
iii. A and D?
iv. B and C?
v. B and D?
vi. C and D?
b. Which pairs of events are mutually exclusive?
c. Imagine you have already rolled the red dice. It is a $6$.

What is the chance of each of the event A, B, C and D happening now?
d. Write two events of your own about the dice that not mutually exclusive.
e. Write two events of your own about the dice that are mutually exclusive.
8. Look at this spinner.

Asubi uses his knowledge of likelihood and fractions to predict that after $8$ spins the spinner is most likely to land on:
red $4$ times
blue $3$ times
yellow $1$ time.
Predict how times each colour will be landed on for these numbers of spins.
a. $16$ spins
b. $40$ spins
c. $200$ spins
9. Take a total of $10$ red and blue objects. For example, counters, cubes or beads.
a. How many blue objects?
b. How many red objects?
Hide the objects, for example in a bag or under a cloth of piece of paper.
You are going to take, record and replace an object $20$ times.
c. How many red objects would you expect to take?
d. How many blue objects would you expect to take?
e. Conduct the experiment. Record the colour of the counters you get in a tally chart.
f. Describe your results. Do your results match your prediction?
Question: Vanessa makes this prediction:
There are $12$ different outcomes when I roll two dice and add the numbers.
The chance of rolling a $12$ is one out of twelve. I predict that if I roll two dice $60$ times I will most likely roll $12$ five times.
Method:
| Number rolled | Tally | Total |
|---|---|---|
| $1$ | ||
| $2$ | ||
| $3$ | ||
| $4$ | ||
| $5$ | ||
| $6$ | ||
| $7$ | ||
| $8$ | ||
| $9$ | ||
| $10$ | ||
| $11$ | ||
| $12$ |
Follow-up Questions: