In a high school basketball game, a player on the home team makes two free throws. One student asks the student next to her what he thinks the probability of hitting two free throws in a row is. The student replies, "The probability of him making a free throw is probably about .6, so hitting two free throws is probably about 1.2." Why can this immediately be dismissed as incorrect? A. The final number, 1.2, is a fraction, which can never represent a probability. B. The probability of making a free throw can never be .6. C. The probability of an event happening twice in a row can never b
how many throws does the student aims for
i think it is B
theres also another choice which is D: The final number is greater than 1, which is not a valid probability.
yeah... its option B... The probability of making a free throw can never be 0.6 this is my answer because if you have a free throw attempt, the probability would be 0.5 because there's a 50% chance you'll make it and a 50% chance you wont. So having two free throw, the chance of making both would be 1
Okay thanks
oh,then it would still be B
pleasure
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