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Mathematics 15 Online
OpenStudy (anonymous):

Please check my answer: Consider the students in your statistics class as the population and suppose they are seated in four rows of 10 students each. To select a sample, you toss a coin. If it comes up heads, you use the 20 students sitting in the first two rows as your sample. If it comes up tails, you use the 20 students sitting in the last two rows as your sample. Does every student have an equal chance of being selected for the sample? I think so. It should be a 50% chance

OpenStudy (unklerhaukus):

is the student flipping the coin seated in one of those rows?

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