QUESTION IMAGE
Question
a two - way frequency table shows grades for students in college and students in high school:
| high school | college | total | |
|---|---|---|---|
| gpa below 3.0 | 46 | 14 | 60 |
| 60 | 40 | 100 |
based on this data, are \being in high school\ and \gpa above 3.0\ independent events?
yes, p(high school ∩ gpa above 3.0) = p(high school) · p(gpa above 3.0)
no, p(high school ∩ gpa above 3.0) = p(high school) · p(gpa above 3.0)
yes, p(high school ∩ gpa above 3.0) ≠ p(high school) · p(gpa above 3.0)
no, p(high school ∩ gpa above 3.0) ≠ p(high school) · p(gpa above 3.0)
Step1: Calculate P(high school)
$P(\text{high school})=\frac{60}{100} = 0.6$
Step2: Calculate P(GPA above 3.0)
$P(\text{GPA above 3.0})=\frac{40}{100}=0.4$
Step3: Calculate P(high school ∩ GPA above 3.0)
$P(\text{high school}\cap\text{GPA above 3.0})=\frac{14}{100} = 0.14$
Step4: Calculate P(high school)×P(GPA above 3.0)
$P(\text{high school})\times P(\text{GPA above 3.0})=0.6\times0.4 = 0.24$
Step5: Compare the two - probabilities
Since $0.14
eq0.24$, i.e., $P(\text{high school}\cap\text{GPA above 3.0})
eq P(\text{high school})\times P(\text{GPA above 3.0})$, the events are not independent.
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No, P(high school ∩ GPA above 3.0) ≠ P(high school)·P(GPA above 3.0)