Guided Notes
Guided Notes
1. Students will be able to construct a two-way data table with relative frequencies
2. Students will be able to determine joint, marginal, and conditional relative
frequencies in the context of data
Two-way Frequency Table = frequency table that displays data belonging to two
different categories
Joint Relative Frequency = ratio of a value that is in the body of the table to the total
number of data values
Marginal Relative Frequency = ratio of a value that is in the marginal column or row of
the table to the total number of data values
Conditional Relative Frequency.= ratio of value that is in the body of the table to the
marginal total of the table
Of the people that said they were attending, how many are kids? 45/70
Of the adults that were surveyed, how many said they are not attending? 15/40
Of people that said they were not attending, how many are adults? 15/50
Of the kids that were surveyed, how many said they were attending? 45/80
Example 1: Fill in the table below that shows the different sports that boys and girls
participate in at a local high school.
a) Complete the joint and marginal relative frequency table based on the above data:
Given the number of students that play soccer, how many are boys? 50/110
Of the girls that play a sport, how many play volleyball? 55/155
What is the probability that a student plays basketball, given they are a boy? 45/130
a) Complete the joint and marginal relative frequency table based on the above data:
Given the freshman that were surveyed, how many prefer pizza? 10/30
Of the students that prefer tacos, how many are sophomores? 10/22
What is the probability a student likes hamburgers, given they are a freshman? 8/30
What is the probability a student is a freshman, given they like tacos? 12/22