Your Learning Goals for This Lesson
By the end of this lesson, you will be able to:
- Define and interpret
as "probability of given " - Calculate conditional probability from a two-way table
- Read conditional language in SAT problem statements
- Distinguish
from and explain the difference
Knowing Something Changes the Question
Imagine asking: "What is the probability that this person brought an umbrella today?"
- Without any information: you use all people as the denominator
- If you know it rained today: you restrict to people who experienced rain
The sample space shrinks when we have additional information.
Notation: Means "Given B"
The vertical bar
Formula:
With counts from a table:
Reading Conditional Probability from Tables
Rule: "Given that..." → find that group's total → use as denominator.
Example 1:
| Full-time | Part-time | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Satisfied | 120 | 50 | 170 |
| Not satisfied | 60 | 70 | 130 |
| Total | 180 | 120 | 300 |
Given "full-time" → denominator = 180
Example 2:
Same table — now the condition is "part-time."
- "Given part-time" → denominator = 120 (part-time column total)
- "Not satisfied and part-time" → numerator = 70
Quick Check: Switching the Condition
Using the same table:
| Full-time | Part-time | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Satisfied | 120 | 50 | 170 |
| Not satisfied | 60 | 70 | 130 |
| Total | 180 | 120 | 300 |
Find
vs : Different Denominators
The same two numbers (120, 300) — but different denominators.
Comparing P(A|B) and P(B|A) Side-by-Side
Same numerator. Different denominators. Different answers.
These are different questions — read the condition carefully.
SAT Language Cues for Conditional Probability
These phrases signal a conditional question:
- "given that..." → classic conditional notation
- "among those who..." → restricts to subgroup
- "of the [group]..." → e.g., "of the part-time workers"
- "if a [group member] is selected..." → restricts
Strategy: Underline the phrase. That group = denominator.
SAT-Style Problem: Parse the Language
200 students; 80 play sports. Of sports players, 60 are Grade 10.
P(Grade 10 | plays sports)?
- Condition: "plays sports" → denominator = 80
- "Grade 10 and sports" = 60
Quick Check: Identify the Given Group
"A worker is selected at random from the part-time employees. What is the probability they are satisfied?"
What is the denominator?
Think before advancing…
Common Trap: Using the Grand Total
"Given full-time" → correct denominator = 180, not 300.
| Answer | Calculation |
|---|---|
| Correct | |
| Wrong |
Test yourself: Is there a "given" phrase? If yes, use that group's total.
Fill in Missing Table Values Before Computing
Complete the table first — then apply the conditional rule.
| Remote | Office | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Manager | 30 | 20 | 50 |
| Staff | 40 | 60 | 100 |
| Total | 70 | 80 | 150 |
Practice: Conditional Probability from a Table
| Math | Eng | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gr 11 | 55 | 35 | 90 |
| Gr 12 | 45 | 45 | 90 |
Check Your Work: Practice Solutions
1. Given Grade 11 (total=90):
2. Given English (total=80):
3. Given Math (total=100):
Notice:
Key Takeaways: Conditional Probability Rules
- ✓
: given B → denominator = B's total - ✓ "Given that," "among," "of the" = conditional signal
- ✓
— order matters
Never use grand total for conditional P
Underline the given phrase to find the denominator
What You Will Learn Next
Future topics build on today's conditional probability skills:
- Independence: when does
? - Bayes' theorem: connecting
and - Combined probability: multi-step problems
Conditional probability is the foundation for all advanced probability.