Use what you have learned about mutually inclusive and exclusive events.
Apply the formula for calculating the probability of events A or B.
There are four presidential candidates in a country. A street survey was conducted asking 2,500 registered voters which candidate they will vote for in the coming election. The table summarizes the results of the survey.
Presidential Candidates Number of Supporters
Candidate 1 250
Candidate 2 1,250
Candidate 3 450
Candidate 4 550
Part 1: What is the probability of randomly selecting a person who will vote for Candidate 1 or 2?
(2 points)
Responses
2502500
250 over 2500
15002500
1500 over 2500
10002500
1000 over 2500
12502500
1250 over 2500
Question 2
Part 2: If 1,000 more voters are surveyed, how many of them will likely prefer Candidate 3 or 4? Show your work and explain your answer.(2 points)
3 answers
Number of supporters for Candidate 3: 450
Number of supporters for Candidate 4: 550
Total number of supporters for Candidate 3 or 4: 450 + 550 = 1,000
Total number of voters surveyed after adding 1,000 more voters: 2,500 + 1,000 = 3,500
Probability of selecting a person who will vote for Candidate 3 or 4: 1,000 / 3,500 = 2/7
Therefore, if 1,000 more voters are surveyed, around 285 of them will likely prefer Candidate 3 or 4.
Number of supporters for Candidate 1: 250
Number of supporters for Candidate 2: 1,250
Total number of supporters for Candidate 1 or 2: 250 + 1,250 = 1,500
Total number of voters surveyed: 2,500
Probability of selecting a person who will vote for Candidate 1 or 2: 1,500 / 2,500 = 0.6
Therefore, the probability of randomly selecting a person who will vote for Candidate 1 or 2 is 0.6 or 60%.