Somebody please help me, I'm stuck on this math question!! Here is the question:

Question: On a Science quiz, David got 45 out of 70 items correct. What is the empirical probability of his incorrect responses?
I have to write my answer in the simplest form of a fraction.

This is seventh grade math. This will give you 15 points for answering. I'm in desperate need of help. So, please don't just give any answer and explanation for the points. Please give the correct answer and explanation for this question.



Answer :

Answer:

5/ 14

Step-by-step explanation:

David got 45 out of 70 items correct, means that David's incorrect responses are 25 out of 70.

Therefore,

The empirical probability of his incorrect responses = number of incorrect responses ÷ total responses

= 25 / 70

= 5/ 14

Empirical probability is probability based on experience. So if you flipped a coin three times and got heads every time, the empirical probability of getting heads again would be 100%.

In this case, the empirical probability of the number of incorrect responses is directly related to David's experience. According to that reasoning, he will get 25/70 questions wrong next time. Reduced that is 5/14.

This question IS worded a little weirdly, so getting confused is completely normal. Before submitting, make sure you agree with everything I say. If it makes sense to you too, then its probably right.

If this helps, please consider marking me as Brainliest. Good luck!

Other Questions