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Permutations | Statistics and Probability

Permutations

ACT Statistics and Probability

In this lesson:

  • Count ordered arrangements using factorials
  • Apply the formula
  • Solve ACT-style permutation problems
Grade 10 ACT Math | Statistics and Probability: Counting Techniques
Permutations | Statistics and Probability

Your Learning Goals for This Lesson

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

  1. Evaluate factorial expressions including and
  2. Explain why order matters in permutations
  3. Apply to count ordered arrangements
  4. Solve applied permutation problems (rankings, codes, seating)
Grade 10 ACT Math | Statistics and Probability: Counting Techniques
Permutations | Statistics and Probability

Listing All Arrangements of Three Items

List them: ABC, ACB, BAC, BCA, CAB, CBA → 6 arrangements

  • 3 choices for position 1
  • × 2 remaining for position 2
  • × 1 remaining for position 3
  • =

This product is written (read "3 factorial").

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

Factorial Notation and Key Special Cases

  • (definition — prevents division by zero)
  • (cancel )
Grade 10 ACT Math | Statistics and Probability: Counting Techniques
Permutations | Statistics and Probability

Quick Check: Simplify a Factorial Expression

Cancel the common factor. Think before advancing…

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

When Order Matters: Permutation Situations

Side-by-side table: Order Matters (permutations) vs Order Does Not Matter — with ranked/unranked examples

Key question: Does rearranging the selection change the outcome?

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

Deriving the Permutation Formula from Counting

Problem: Choose president, VP, and secretary from 20 club members.

  • 20 choices for president
  • × 19 remaining for VP
  • × 18 remaining for secretary

= total items; = positions being filled

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

Example 1: Award Rankings —

8 students compete; 3 receive 1st, 2nd, 3rd place awards.

  • Order matters (1st 2nd)
  • ,

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

Example 2: 4-Digit Code —

Digits 0–9, no repeated digits. How many 4-digit codes exist?

  • Order matters (1234 4321)
  • ,

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

Quick Check: Apply the Formula

Set up the formula and simplify. Think before advancing…

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

Special Case: Arranging All Items

When (arrange everything in the set):

Example: 5 books on a shelf →

prevents division-by-zero here.

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

ACT Language Cues for Permutation Problems

Phrases that signal a permutation:

  • "arranged in order" → ordered positions
  • "ranked / 1st, 2nd, 3rd" → distinct positions
  • "no repeated digits" → pool shrinks with each pick
  • "roles assigned" → distinct roles = order matters

Strategy: Underline the signal phrase first, then apply .

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

ACT Problem 1: Seating in a Row

5 students in 5 seats. How many arrangements?

  • All 5 are being placed in distinct positions

Show the work:

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

ACT Problem 2: Arranging Letters of a Word

How many ways can the letters W, O, R, K be arranged?

  • 4 distinct letters, 4 positions

Verify: 4 choices for first, 3 for second, 2 for third, 1 for last.

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

ACT Practice: Solve Three Permutation Problems

Solve before advancing:

  1. A race has 6 runners. How many ways can gold, silver, bronze be awarded?
  2. A 3-digit code uses digits 1–9, no repeats. How many codes exist?
  3. How many ways can 4 different books fill 4 shelf spots?
Grade 10 ACT Math | Statistics and Probability: Counting Techniques
Permutations | Statistics and Probability

Check Your Work: Practice Solutions

1. ways

2. codes

3. arrangements

Order matters in all three. Each selection reduces the pool.

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

Key Takeaways: Permutation Rules and Warnings

  • = product down to 1; always
  • — multiply the top factors
  • Order matters → permutation; not → combination

⚠️ : never write

⚠️ Cancel before multiplying — never expand full factorials

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

What You Will Learn Next

Next lesson builds directly on today's permutation skills:

  • Combinations: when order does not matter
  • Formula:
  • Same context — different question

Permutations are always larger than (or equal to) combinations for the same and .

Grade 10 ACT Math | Statistics and Probability: Counting Techniques