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c.w.richardjr
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Probability

by c.w.richardjr Sun Mar 03, 2013 12:21 pm

This question (not exact) comes from GMAT Prep.

From a group of 3 boys and 3 girls, 4 are selected randomly. What is the probability that an equal number of boys and girls will be selected?

Please help.

Charles
vikash.121186
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Re: Probability

by vikash.121186 Sun Mar 03, 2013 6:23 pm

I think it should be (3C2*3C2)/6C4 which is 9/15=3/5.
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Re: Probability

by jnelson0612 Sun Mar 03, 2013 11:42 pm

c.w.richardjr Wrote:This question (not exact) comes from GMAT Prep.

From a group of 3 boys and 3 girls, 4 are selected randomly. What is the probability that an equal number of boys and girls will be selected?

Please help.

Charles


Would you like to post the exact question? GMAT Prep questions are allowed to be posted here.
Jamie Nelson
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c.w.richardjr
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Re: Probability

by c.w.richardjr Mon Mar 04, 2013 8:24 pm

vikash.121186 Wrote:I think it should be (3C2*3C2)/6C4 which is 9/15=3/5.


Thank you for your response. Could you possibly provide an explanation? First off, I am unfamiliar with the nCr formula, which I have now learned. Still, I was unaware of this being a tool to use for Combinatorics / Probability. How do you know when to use this tool? Please explain a little bit. Thank you.

Sorry but I don't have the full problem. It was off of the GMAT Prep practice test, and I didn't write the whole thing down.
RonPurewal
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Re: Probability

by RonPurewal Tue Mar 05, 2013 7:41 am

c.w.richardjr Wrote:This question (not exact) comes from GMAT Prep.

From a group of 3 boys and 3 girls, 4 are selected randomly. What is the probability that an equal number of boys and girls will be selected?

Please help.

Charles


if you don't like the c/p formulas, you can always do the low-tech solution: just list out all the possibilities, and circle the ones that do what you want.
let's say the boys are a, b, c, and the girls are x, y, z. (better than d/e/f, because the difference is more obvious if you pick letters from opposite extremes of the alphabet.)
here are all ways to select 4 of them -- as it turns out, there are only 15 ways:
a, b, c, x
a, b, c, y
a, b, c, z
a, b, x, y
a, b, x, z
a, b, y, z
a, c, x, y
a, c, x, z
a, c, y, z
a, x, y, z
b, c, x, y
b, c, x, z
b, c, y, z
b, x, y, z
c, x, y, z

you should be able to make this list in substantially less than 1 minute.

now, just circle (= boldface, here) the ones that have exactly two of the boys (a, b, c) and exactly two of the girls (d, e, f):
a, b, c, x
a, b, c, y
a, b, c, z
a, b, x, y
a, b, x, z
a, b, y, z
a, c, x, y
a, c, x, z
a, c, y, z

a, x, y, z
b, c, x, y
b, c, x, z
b, c, y, z

b, x, y, z
c, x, y, z

that's a total of 9 out of 15 possibilities, giving a probability of 9/15 = 3/5.
zishj865
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Re: Probability

by zishj865 Fri Nov 11, 2016 4:38 pm

Hi Ron

I solved it with the probability approach. I know the combinations approach is much easier, but i want to understand the probability approach that dose not involve listing all the outcomes.

3/6. 2/5. 3/4.2/3 * 4!/2!2! =3/5

Here the order within the 2-boy and 2-girl groups has already been accounted for .When we multiply by 4! it will duplicate groups of boys and girls which have already been considered in the 3/6 *2/5* 3/4 *2/3 part.

e.g B1B2G1G2 would be repeated when we multiply by 4! because B1B2G1G2 has already been counted once in the 3/6* 2/5* 3/4 *2/3 so to eliminate those repeated combinations we need to divide by 2! twice.

Is my reasoning correct?


Thanks
RonPurewal
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Re: Probability

by RonPurewal Sun Nov 27, 2016 8:17 am

that reasoning looks valid to me... but, honestly,

...1/
how long did it take you to come up with that?

...2/
how CERTAIN were you of the result?
(as opposed to just listing out 15 possibilities and counting 9 of them, which would have absolute certainty)

AND
...3/
did you actually come up with that reasoning on your first try? or did you only get there because you knew the answer was 3/5, and so you could keep adjusting the reasoning until you actually got that answer?

remember—you should be trying for approaches that are actually practical under testing conditions.
the reasoning you've posted here is ... impressive, but, i don't think it has a lot of utility as far as actually preparing you for the test you're going to take.

in fact, if you would actually NOT just make a list of the 15 possibilities BECAUSE you were trying to come up with something "advanced" like this, then, thinking about these kinds of "advanced" approaches will actually make you WORSE at this test!