The answer is pretty close to zero. This is because out of the millions of people across the world, a very small proportion make it to college.
Incidentally, "college" is not a term that is used consistently. For example, Eton (the famous English "public" school in Windsor, is actually called Eton College. On the other hand, the London School of Economics and Political Science is for graduate (and post-grad) studies. As a result, the question is somewhat open to interpretation.
The answer is pretty close to zero. This is because out of the millions of people across the world, a very small proportion make it to college.
Incidentally, "college" is not a term that is used consistently. For example, Eton (the famous English "public" school in Windsor, is actually called Eton College. On the other hand, the London School of Economics and Political Science is for graduate (and post-grad) studies. As a result, the question is somewhat open to interpretation.
The answer is pretty close to zero. This is because out of the millions of people across the world, a very small proportion make it to college.
Incidentally, "college" is not a term that is used consistently. For example, Eton (the famous English "public" school in Windsor, is actually called Eton College. On the other hand, the London School of Economics and Political Science is for graduate (and post-grad) studies. As a result, the question is somewhat open to interpretation.
The answer is pretty close to zero. This is because out of the millions of people across the world, a very small proportion make it to college.
Incidentally, "college" is not a term that is used consistently. For example, Eton (the famous English "public" school in Windsor, is actually called Eton College. On the other hand, the London School of Economics and Political Science is for graduate (and post-grad) studies. As a result, the question is somewhat open to interpretation.
Chat with our AI personalities
The answer is pretty close to zero. This is because out of the millions of people across the world, a very small proportion make it to college.
Incidentally, "college" is not a term that is used consistently. For example, Eton (the famous English "public" school in Windsor, is actually called Eton College. On the other hand, the London School of Economics and Political Science is for graduate (and post-grad) studies. As a result, the question is somewhat open to interpretation.
Yes. Independent events can exist in reality. Dependent events means that one event has had an effect on the other. For instance, if we look at the probability of someone going to the shops, and the probability of them buying an apple, the latter is clearly dependent on the former. Independent events are simply events that don't have this connection. The probability of one does not influence or predict the probability of the other. For instance, if I studied the probability of you going to see a film on a particular day, and the probability of someone in China getting a hole in one in golf, these are very clearly independent events.
Yes.Yes.Yes.Yes.
Can someone please answer this
Theoretical probability is what should occur (what you think is going to occur) and experimental probability is what really occurs when you conduct an experiment.
See the Basic Rules for Probability section in the related link.