SR.DSR.4.3

Use sampling distributions developed through simulation to describe the sample-to-sample variability of sample statistics.

Example Problems
A city researcher randomly samples 50 households. Each household independently has a 70% chance of having at least one pet. Let represent the number of households with pets in the sample of 50.

Find the
mean of .
A coin lands heads with probability on each flip. The coin is flipped 40 times, and flips are independent. Let represent the number of heads observed in the 40 flips.

Find the
mean of .
An IT team reviews a batch of 40 incoming emails at random. Based on past data, each email independently has a 20% chance of being flagged as spam. Let represent the number of emails flagged as spam in the batch of 40.

Find the
mean of .
Goblins

1-on-1 AI tutoring aligned to SR.DSR.4.3. Instant help for students, real-time insights for teachers.

Used in classrooms by 100,000+ students at Baltimore County, Plano ISD, Deer Valley USD, KIPP, and districts nationwide.

Free for teachers, forever →