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Venn Diagrams and Counting Outcomes

REPRESENTATIONAL
MathematicsProbability|Ages 12—13|ID: mt_eSv_w46u6H

Construct and interpret Venn diagrams with two or three sets to organise and count outcomes; use systematic listing and the product rule for counting to enumerate all possible outcomes of combined events

Mastery Evidence

  • Draw a two-circle Venn diagram to sort 30 students by whether they like football, like cricket, or like both
  • Shade the intersection A ∩ B and the union A ∪ B on a Venn diagram and explain what each region represents
  • Use a completed Venn diagram to calculate P(A), P(B), P(A ∩ B), and P(A ∪ B)

Assessment Prompt

“If [child] surveys a class about which sports they play and draws a Venn diagram to show the results, can they use it to find out how many students play both sports — and calculate the probability of picking one of those students at random?”

Curriculum Standards2 alignments

7.SP.8bCommon Core State Standards for Mathematics
Represent sample spaces for compound events

Represent sample spaces for compound events using methods such as organized lists, tables and tree diagrams. For an event described in everyday language (e.g., “rolling double sixes”), identify the outcomes in the sample space which compose the event.

SP
KS3.Maths.Prob.3The national curriculum in England
Enumerate Sets

enumerate sets and unions/intersections of sets systematically, using tables, grids and Venn diagrams

Mathematics · Key Stage 3

Prerequisites1

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