Combinations | Statistics and Probability

Combinations

ACT Statistics and Probability

In this lesson:

  • Understand why combinations count less than permutations
  • Apply the formula
  • Decide: permutation or combination?
Grade 10 ACT Math | Statistics and Probability: Counting Techniques
Combinations | Statistics and Probability

Your Learning Goals for This Lesson

By the end of this lesson, you will be able to:

  1. Explain why for the same and
  2. Apply to count unordered selections
  3. Choose permutations vs combinations for each ACT problem
  4. Solve problems involving committees, teams, and card hands
Grade 10 ACT Math | Statistics and Probability: Counting Techniques
Combinations | Statistics and Probability

Listing Permutations and Grouping Them

Choose 2 from . All ordered pairs (12 total):

AB, AC, AD, BA, BC, BD, CA, CB, CD, DA, DB, DC

Group by same letters: {AB,BA} {AC,CA} {AD,DA} {BC,CB} {BD,DB} {CD,DC} → 6 groups

Each group = one combination. .

Grade 10 ACT Math | Statistics and Probability: Counting Techniques
Combinations | Statistics and Probability

Why Combinations Are Smaller Than Permutations

Each combination of items generates permutations.

For the example:

Dividing by removes the overcounting from ordering.

Grade 10 ACT Math | Statistics and Probability: Counting Techniques
Combinations | Statistics and Probability

Worked Example: Confirming

ordered arrangements.

Each pair appears twice (AB and BA):

Verify by listing: AB, AC, AD, BC, BD, CD — exactly 6 unordered pairs. ✓

Grade 10 ACT Math | Statistics and Probability: Counting Techniques
Combinations | Statistics and Probability

Quick Check: Overcounting Groups of Three Items

If you choose 3 items from a set, each combination appears how many times in the list of permutations?

Think before advancing…

Grade 10 ACT Math | Statistics and Probability: Counting Techniques
Combinations | Statistics and Probability

Combination Formula with Annotated Parts

Annotated combination formula with n = total pool, r = number chosen, and denominator terms labeled

= total items; = items chosen (order does not matter)

Grade 10 ACT Math | Statistics and Probability: Counting Techniques
Combinations | Statistics and Probability

Example 1: Committee of 4 from 10

A committee of 4 from 10 volunteers. Order does not matter.

  • ,

Grade 10 ACT Math | Statistics and Probability: Counting Techniques
Combinations | Statistics and Probability

Example 2: Pizza Toppings —

8 toppings; choose 3. Pepperoni-olive-mushroom = olive-mushroom-pepperoni.

  • ,

Grade 10 ACT Math | Statistics and Probability: Counting Techniques
Combinations | Statistics and Probability

Quick Check: Compute the Combination

Show each step before advancing…

Grade 10 ACT Math | Statistics and Probability: Counting Techniques
Combinations | Statistics and Probability

Permutation vs Combination: The Decision

Order MATTERS → Permutation :

  • Ranked positions: 1st, 2nd, 3rd
  • Assigned roles: president, VP, secretary

Order does NOT matter → Combination :

  • Committees and teams without roles
  • Lottery numbers, card hands, menu choices

Test: "Would rearranging the selection give a different outcome?"

Grade 10 ACT Math | Statistics and Probability: Counting Techniques
Combinations | Statistics and Probability

Same Context, Two Formulas: Compare Results

12 applicants, 5 selected for a team:

Scenario Formula Answer
5 on team, no roles
5 assigned positions 1–5

Same and — different formulas — very different answers.

Grade 10 ACT Math | Statistics and Probability: Counting Techniques
Combinations | Statistics and Probability

ACT Language Cues for Combination Problems

Phrases that signal a combination:

  • "committee" / "team" → no distinct roles
  • "choose" / "select" / "pick" → unordered group
  • "lottery numbers" → drawn set, not sequence
  • "hand of cards" → group, not ranked order

Strategy: Underline the group-selection phrase. If no roles assigned, use .

Grade 10 ACT Math | Statistics and Probability: Counting Techniques
Combinations | Statistics and Probability

ACT Problem 1: Lottery Ticket

Choose 5 numbers from 1–40 for a lottery ticket. How many tickets exist?

  • Order does not matter (same 5 numbers = same ticket)
  • ,

Grade 10 ACT Math | Statistics and Probability: Counting Techniques
Combinations | Statistics and Probability

ACT Problem 2: Hand of Cards

5-card hand from a 52-card deck. How many distinct hands?

  • Order does not matter (same 5 cards = same hand)
  • ,

Grade 10 ACT Math | Statistics and Probability: Counting Techniques
Combinations | Statistics and Probability

ACT Practice: Three Counting Problems

Decide: permutation or combination? Then solve.

  1. 9 students; 3 form a study group. How many groups?
  2. 7 runners; medals for 1st, 2nd, 3rd place. How many outcomes?
  3. A shop has 6 flavors; choose 2 scoops (different flavors). How many pairs?
Grade 10 ACT Math | Statistics and Probability: Counting Techniques
Combinations | Statistics and Probability

Check Your Work: Practice Solutions

1. Group, no roles →

2. Ranked medals →

3. Unordered pair of flavors →

Problem 1 and 3 use combinations; Problem 2 uses permutations.

Grade 10 ACT Math | Statistics and Probability: Counting Techniques
Combinations | Statistics and Probability

Key Takeaways: Combination Rules and Warnings

  • — two factorial terms in denominator
  • Order does not matter → combination; order matters → permutation
  • always

⚠️ Denominator needs both and — never drop one

⚠️ Write top numerator factors, then divide by

Grade 10 ACT Math | Statistics and Probability: Counting Techniques
Combinations | Statistics and Probability

What You Will Learn Next

Future topics build on both counting techniques:

  • Multi-step counting: combine multiplication with and
  • Probability with combinations:
  • Pascal's triangle and its connection to

Permutations and combinations are the foundation for probability calculations.

Grade 10 ACT Math | Statistics and Probability: Counting Techniques

Click to begin the narrated lesson

Combinations