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Conditional Probability and Tree Diagrams

Overview

Students move beyond basic probability to conditional probability — where the probability of an event depends on whether another has occurred — using both formal notation and tree diagrams.

Learning Objective
Students calculate conditional probabilities using P(A|B) = P(A∩B)/P(B), draw and use tree diagrams for dependent and independent events, and apply Bayes' theorem in straightforward cases.

Resources needed

  • Calculator
  • Mini whiteboards
  • Plain paper for tree diagrams

Lesson stages

0 / 7 done
  1. 1 A bag has 5 red and 3 blue counters. P(red on first draw) = 5/8. Now draw without replacement. If first was red, bag now has 4 red and 3 blue. P(red second | red first) = 4/7. 'The probability changed because of what happened first — this is conditional probability.'
  2. 2 P(A|B) = 'probability of A given B has occurred' = P(A∩B)/P(B). Example: in a class, 60% study maths, 40% study physics, 25% study both. P(physics|maths) = P(both)/P(maths) = 0.25/0.60 = 5/12. Students apply to two examples.
  3. 3 Flip a coin twice. Both outcomes independent. P(H,H) = 1/2 × 1/2 = 1/4. Full tree: four branches, each with probability 1/4. 'For independent events, multiply along branches, add for alternatives.' Students draw the tree and verify all probabilities sum to 1.
  4. 4 Draw two cards without replacement from a standard deck (52 cards). P(both aces). P(1st ace) = 4/52. P(2nd ace | 1st ace) = 3/51. P(both) = 4/52 × 3/51 = 12/2652 = 1/221. Students complete the full tree for (ace/not ace) × 2 draws.
  5. 5 Draw a Venn diagram from a frequency table: 200 students, 120 play sport, 80 study music, 40 do both. Find P(music|sport) = 40/120 = 1/3. Compared to P(music) = 80/200 = 2/5. 'Are sport and music independent?' (No — P(music|sport) ≠ P(music).)
  6. 6 Events A and B are independent iff P(A|B) = P(A) iff P(A∩B) = P(A)×P(B). Students test three pairs of events from given data to determine independence.
  7. 7 A disease affects 1% of the population. A test is 95% accurate. If you test positive, what is the probability you have the disease? Students set up a tree diagram with realistic numbers (use 10,000 people as a reference population). Discuss why the answer surprises most people — and what it means for medical decision-making.

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Variations

  • Extend to Bayes' theorem in formal notation
  • Apply to reliability in engineering (series and parallel systems)
  • Use simulation to estimate conditional probabilities
More information

Display: conditional probability, P(A|B), independent, dependent, event, without replacement, mutually exclusive. Teach: 'multiply along, add across.'

Focus on tree diagrams only before introducing formula notation. Provide blank tree diagram templates. Use whole number frequencies before decimal probabilities.

Do students adjust probabilities on subsequent branches for dependent events? Do they correctly apply P(A|B) = P(A∩B)/P(B)? Do they sum all branches to verify they total 1?

All tree diagrams drawn on plain paper. Use a scientific calculator. No printed materials needed.

Students may not reduce the denominator (or numerator) for the second draw without replacement. Reinforce: removing a counter changes both the total and the count.