Questions on probability of this type can be very tricky; even experienced ones can get it wrong. I think answer is:In my 3 Unit exam, one of the question was like this:
A group consisting of 3 men and 6 women attends a prize giving ceremony.
If 5 prizes are awarded at random to members of the group, find the probability that exactly 3 of the prizes are awarded to women if there is no restriction on the number of prizes per person.
This question was quite controversial as some people in my year have noted that this is not a permutation question, rather, Binomial Probability question. I personally don't agree with this. I got this question right but there has been a backlash from people that the solution is incorrect.
Please post up your solution. I want to see if yours corresponds to mine and if you can, please provide your own explanation. Thanks.
This is a case of binomial probability, n=5 trials; p = prob of success = 2/3, q = prob of failure = 1/3. So problem becomes one of number of successes (i.e. out of 5 prize awards, how many times the 6 women as a group, succeeds in getting the prize). Here we are looking for the prob. that out of the 5 prizes given out (each called a trial or an experiment), the women as a block gets exactly 3 - i.e. 3 successes. Hope this explains it. I could be wrong!
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