SOLUTION: Let’s assume the following statements are true: Historically, 75% of the five-star football recruits in the nation go to universities in the three most competitive athletic confe

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Question 1163922: Let’s assume the following statements are true: Historically, 75% of the five-star football recruits in the nation go to universities in the three most competitive athletic conferences. Historically, five-star recruits get full football scholarships 93% of the time, regardless of which conference they go to. If this pattern holds true for this year’s recruiting class, answer the following:
a. Based on these numbers, what is the probability that a randomly selected five-star recruit who chooses one of the best three conferences will be offered a full football scholarship?
b. What are the odds a randomly selected five-star recruit will not select a university from one of the three best conferences? Explain.
c. Explain whether these are independent or dependent events. Are they Inclusive or exclusive? Explain.

Answer by CPhill(2264) About Me  (Show Source):
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Based on the statistics provided, here are the calculations and logical breakdowns for this year's recruiting class:
### a. Probability of a Scholarship in a Top Conference
The probability is **93%** (or **0.93**).
**Reasoning:** The prompt states that five-star recruits get full scholarships 93% of the time **"regardless of which conference they go to."** This implies that the scholarship rate and the conference choice are treated as independent factors in this dataset. Therefore, knowing the recruit chose a top conference does not change the established 93% probability.
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### b. Odds of Not Selecting a Top Conference
The odds are **1 to 3** (or $1:3$).
**Explanation:**
1. **Probability ($P$):** We know 75% ($3/4$) of recruits choose a top conference. Therefore, the probability of **not** choosing one is 25% ($1/4$).
2. **Calculating Odds:** Odds are expressed as the ratio of *Successes* to *Failures* (or in this case, *Not Selecting* vs. *Selecting*).
* $\text{Odds} = \frac{P(\text{Not Top})}{P(\text{Top})} = \frac{25\%}{75\%} = \frac{1}{3}$
3. **Interpretation:** For every 1 recruit who chooses a school outside the top three conferences, there are 3 recruits who choose a school within them.
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### c. Event Relationships
**Independent vs. Dependent**
These are **Independent** events.
* **Why?** The prompt explicitly states the scholarship rate is 93% "regardless of which conference they go to." This means the outcome of the first event (choosing a conference) has no effect on the probability of the second event (getting a scholarship).
**Inclusive vs. Exclusive**
These are **Inclusive** events.
* **Why?** Mutually exclusive events are things that cannot happen at the same time (like a coin landing on both Heads and Tails). In this scenario, a recruit **can** both choose a top conference **and** receive a full scholarship simultaneously. Since these two outcomes can overlap in a single person, they are inclusive.
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Do you have a specific recruit's data you're trying to model, or are you looking for the combined probability of both events happening at once?