I wonder if you guys at HS ever try to work out the rule for AND and OR when it comes to working out probability?
For example, if you toss a coin, the probability of a head is 1/2. If you toss it again, the probability of a head is again 1/2. Therefore the possibility of tossing two heads in two tosses is 1/2 x 1/2 = 1/4. I know I was taught how to work this out a long time ago. But I did not remember that teachers actually prove to me that it was the correct way to time the two probabilities together.
Similarly, the OR rule is to plus the two together. But I also do not remember teachers actually showed me why it worked like that.
Did your teachers bother to prove that these rules work? Or some how show you to derive the rules yourself?
It bugged me for a long time until I tried to work some things out myself much later when I started to doubt the rules. There is good reason to doubt when the teaching was so superficial. For example, they said "the probability is 1/2 to get a head in a toss". Fair enough. Then they said again "If you now toss again, the probability is still 1/2 to get a head". Again, that's fair enough. So I would assume that if I toss again, the probably to get a head is still 1/2 and so on. But then they also said "If you toss many times, the number of heads and tails will be pretty even". And the teaching stopped here! It's so easy to get to the wrong conclusion that after I get 2 heads from 2 tosses, the next toss has a higher probability of being a tail than 1/2. That leads to confusion. The trouble is that I have never had time or will to revisit the issue myself and sort all the gaps in my knowledge about chance out completely. I wish they taught me a bit more.
Any one out there feel this way? Honestly I feel I am much better in math than half of the math teachers out there. So I guess they probably never bother to go deep nowadays.
For example, if you toss a coin, the probability of a head is 1/2. If you toss it again, the probability of a head is again 1/2. Therefore the possibility of tossing two heads in two tosses is 1/2 x 1/2 = 1/4. I know I was taught how to work this out a long time ago. But I did not remember that teachers actually prove to me that it was the correct way to time the two probabilities together.
Similarly, the OR rule is to plus the two together. But I also do not remember teachers actually showed me why it worked like that.
Did your teachers bother to prove that these rules work? Or some how show you to derive the rules yourself?
It bugged me for a long time until I tried to work some things out myself much later when I started to doubt the rules. There is good reason to doubt when the teaching was so superficial. For example, they said "the probability is 1/2 to get a head in a toss". Fair enough. Then they said again "If you now toss again, the probability is still 1/2 to get a head". Again, that's fair enough. So I would assume that if I toss again, the probably to get a head is still 1/2 and so on. But then they also said "If you toss many times, the number of heads and tails will be pretty even". And the teaching stopped here! It's so easy to get to the wrong conclusion that after I get 2 heads from 2 tosses, the next toss has a higher probability of being a tail than 1/2. That leads to confusion. The trouble is that I have never had time or will to revisit the issue myself and sort all the gaps in my knowledge about chance out completely. I wish they taught me a bit more.
Any one out there feel this way? Honestly I feel I am much better in math than half of the math teachers out there. So I guess they probably never bother to go deep nowadays.