- 38.79
- 3053.63
- 904.78
- 2544.69
- 226.19
- 402.12
- 1072.33
- 1526.81
- 28.73
- 113.1
- 3801.33
- 268.08
- 2094.4
- 75.4
- 94.25
- 37.7
- 1884.96
- 2065.24
- 19861.7
- 1385.44
- 287.98
- 4.19
- 3619.11
- 113.1
- 50.27
I did this really quick so I hope all the answers are right, and double check them if you have time just in case
Answer: the percent of study group students from outside the state is 13%
Step-by-step explanation:
The total number of students in the young woman's study group that are from the town where the young woman's school is located is 7%
The total number of students in the young woman's study group that are from in-state (but not from the school's town) is 80%.
Since the rest are from outside the state, the percent of study group students from outside the state would be
100 - (80 + 7) = 100 - 87 = 13%
Answer:
- <u><em>About 0.22</em></u>
Explanation:
There are two sets:
- Set W of incoming seniors who took AP World History, and
- Set E of incoming seniors who took AP European History
And there is a subset, which is the intersection of those two sets:
- Subset W ∩ E of senior students who took both.
The incoming seniors who are allowed to enroll in AP U.S. History, call them the subset S, is the set of those students that belong to W or E or both W ∩E.
By property of sets:
- S = W + E - W∩E = 175 + 36 - 33 = 178
Then, 178 out of 825 incoming seniors took one or both courses, and the desired probability of a randomly selected incoming senior is allowed to enroll in AP U.S. History is: