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Probability — Basics and Possibility Spaces

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·Edexcel GCSE Mathematics·Pearson Edexcel 1MA1·5 min
P1·P2·P3·P4·P5·P6·P7

Probability Scale and Basic Notation (P3, P4)

Probability measures how likely an event is on a scale from 0 (impossible) to 1 (certain).

Complementary probability: (the probability that does not happen).

Exhaustive and mutually exclusive events (P4):

If events cover all possible outcomes and cannot occur simultaneously:

Worked example — a bag contains red, blue, and green counters. , . Find .

Probability from a table: divide the frequency for the event by the total frequency.

Relative Frequency and Experimental Probability (P3, P5)

Relative frequency estimates probability from experiments:

Worked example — a biased coin is tossed 200 times; heads appears 130 times.

Relative frequency of heads

The law of large numbers (P5): as the number of trials increases, the relative frequency tends towards the true theoretical probability. A small sample may deviate significantly from theory; a large sample is more reliable.

Expected frequency (P2): if the probability of an event is and the experiment is performed times:

Worked example. In 300 rolls, expected frequency

Frequency Tables and Frequency Trees (P1)

Two-way tables record outcomes across two categories simultaneously.

CatsDogsTotal
Female81220
Male61420
Total142640

; (conditional — see combined probability lesson)

Frequency trees show how a sample is divided step by step. At each branch, the frequencies must add to the parent frequency.

Worked example — 60 students: 35 study French, of whom 20 also study German; 25 study neither (neither French nor German).

Tree: 60 total → 35 French, 25 not French. Of 35 French: 20 also German, 15 French only. Of 25 not French: 0 study German (given). Total studying German . ✓

Venn Diagrams and Set Notation (P6)

A Venn diagram shows sets as overlapping circles within a rectangle (the universal set ).

SymbolMeaning
or (or both) — union
and — intersection
not — complement
number of elements in

Worked example — 30 students: 18 play football (), 12 play tennis (), 5 play both.

; ;

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Possibility Spaces and Tree Diagrams (P6, P7)

Sample space diagrams (grids) list all outcomes for two combined experiments.

Worked example — roll a fair die and flip a fair coin. Construct the sample space.

— 12 equally likely outcomes.

Tree diagrams show sequential experiments with branching.

Worked example — a bag has 3 red and 2 blue balls. Two balls are drawn with replacement.

Branch probabilities: , at every draw (replacement restores the bag).

Common Exam Mistakes

1. Forgetting to list all branches in a tree diagram

Every outcome at each stage must be shown — if an event has three possible outcomes, there must be three branches. Missing a branch makes the probabilities at that level sum to less than 1.

2. Adding instead of multiplying along a branch

Multiply probabilities along a branch (AND); add probabilities across branches for the same event (OR). The product of branch probabilities gives the probability of that specific path.

3. Venn diagrams — placing the intersection count in both circles

The overlap region shows students in both sets. The "circle-only" regions show students in one set but not the other. Placing the total for set in the circle (instead of subtracting the intersection) double-counts.

4. Expected frequency is not the same as guaranteed frequency

is the expected number of sixes, not the guaranteed number. In any real experiment, the actual count will vary around this value.

MistakeCorrection
" for any two events"This is true only if and are complementary (exhaustive and mutually exclusive)
"Relative frequency = "Relative frequency =
"P(two heads in a row) = 1/2 + 1/2 = 1" — multiply for AND

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