In a class of 60 students, 30 opted for NCC, 32 opted for NSS and 24 opted for both NCC and NSS. If one of these students is selected at random,

+1 vote
14 views
asked Feb 8, 2018 in Mathematics by Rohit Singh (61,782 points) 35 133 356

In a class of 60 students, 30 opted for NCC, 32 opted for NSS and 24 opted for both NCC and NSS. If one of these students is selected at random, find the probability that
(i) The student opted for NCC or NSS.
(ii) The student has opted neither NCC nor NSS.
(iii) The student has opted NSS but not NCC.

1 Answer

+1 vote
answered Feb 8, 2018 by sameer (82,980 points) 5 11 37
selected Mar 4, 2018 by sanjeev
 
Best answer

Let A be the event in which the selected student has opted for NCC and B be the event in which the selected student has opted for NSS.
Total number of students = 60
Number of students who have opted for NCC = 30
∴ P(A) = 30/60 = 1/2
Number of students who have opted for NSS = 32

Number of students who have opted for both NCC and NSS = 24

(i) We know that P(A or B) = P(A) + P(B) – P(A and B)

(ii) Thus, the probability that the selected student has opted for NCC or NSS is 19/30.

Thus, the probability that the selected students has neither opted for NCC nor NSS is 11/30.

(iii) The given information can be represented by a Venn diagram as

It is clear that
Number of students who have opted for NSS but not NCC
= n(B – A) = n(B) – n(A ∩ B) = 32 – 24 = 8
Thus, the probability that the selected student has opted for NSS but not for NCC =

...