Answer: b. It's a fair method because each result is an equally likely possible outcome.
The number of students is same as the number of the sides of the dice. In this scenario, the school principal will roll two dices three times and the number that repeated most will be chosen. For every dice, all number will have equally likely possibility so the randomization is fair(1/6 chance for every student).Rolling the dice >1 times will have a problem because there is a high chance to get draw result. It doesn't have any correlation with fairness though.
Answer:
C
Step-by-step explanation:
pa Brainless
"-the time people spend at work and the number of friends they have"
would be "causation"; because the more/less time someone spends at work is implied to be the *cause* of their number of friends.
"-the length of a person's hair and his or her math skills"
would be "no relationship" seeing as there's nothing that relates these two variables that could have an affect on the outcome of one or the other.
<span>"-a student's test scores in math and physics" would be "correlation" because the two subjects are similar enough that any outcome in one could very well be similarly related to the outcome in the other. </span>
Answer:
transformations are used to to graph the linear function in the form of f(x)=mx+b f ( x ) = m x + b. google says to "Graph f(x)=x f ( x ) = x . Vertically stretch or compress the graph by a factor |m|. Shift the graph up or down b units."