What You Will Be Able to Do
By the end of this lesson, you should be able to:
- Find
from a list, a Venn diagram, and a two-way table - Confirm the same answer appears across representations
- Interpret each conditional probability in the model's context
The Same Probability in Three Pictures
A survey records students by sport played and grade level.
The same conditional probability can be drawn three ways:
- as a list of students
- as a Venn diagram
- as a two-way table
Is it really the same move each time? Let's find out.
Recall: The Counting Fraction Is One Move
From last lesson:
- Restrict to B — B is the new sample space
- Count A among B's outcomes
- Form the fraction
From a List: Cross Out, Then Count
Sample space, conditioning on
- Write every outcome
- Cross out every outcome not in B
- Count how many survivors are in A
From a Venn: Overlap Over B
The denominator is the whole B circle — not the whole rectangle.
From a Table: Joint Cell Over B
- Restrict to B = use B's row (or column) total as the denominator
- Numerator is the A-and-B cell
One Move, Many Pictures — All Agree
| Picture | Where B lives | Where the overlap lives |
|---|---|---|
| List | the survivors | A's among survivors |
| Venn | the whole B circle | the lens (A and B) |
| Table | B's row total | the A-and-B cell |
In a Venn, What's the Denominator?
You want
Which region is the denominator?
- A. The whole rectangle (entire sample space)
- B. The whole B circle
Pick one before advancing — one of these is the classic trap.
Now Say What the Number Means
You can compute
The standard asks for one more thing: interpret it.
A bare fraction isn't finished — it needs a sentence about the actual situation.
Interpret: "Among the B's, This Fraction Are A"
The interpretation template:
Among the B's, this fraction are A.
- "Among the face cards, one in three is a king."
Flip the Conditioning, Change the Answer
Same two events, opposite conditioning:
"One in three face cards is a king" vs. "every king is a face card."
They Differ Because the Reference Group Changes
divides by 12 face cards divides by 4 kings
Same overlap (4); different denominators — so different answers.
Your Turn: Compute and Interpret
A club has 8 tenth-graders; 3 of them are officers.
Find
Compute the fraction, then say it: "among the ___, this fraction are ___."
Two Common Errors to Watch For
Swapping directions: treating
Different reference groups — check which event is after the bar.
Stopping at the number: reporting a fraction with no meaning
Always finish: "among the B's, this fraction are A."
One Move, Many Pictures — Always Interpret
✓ Restrict to B in any picture: survivors, B circle, B's row
✓ The numerator is always the A-and-B overlap
✓ Finish with a sentence: "among the B's, this fraction are A"
Next: combining events — the Addition Rule for "or" and the Multiplication Rule for "and."