Industry-relevant training in Business, Technology, and Design to help professionals and graduates upskill for real-world careers.
Fun, engaging games to boost memory, math fluency, typing speed, and English skills—perfect for learners of all ages.
Enroll to start learning
You’ve not yet enrolled in this course. Please enroll for free to listen to audio lessons, classroom podcasts and take mock test.
Test your understanding with targeted questions related to the topic.
Question 1
Easy
Define what is meant by a fixed number of trials.
💡 Hint: Think about how many times you would perform an experiment.
Question 2
Easy
What are the two outcomes in a binomial trial?
💡 Hint: Consider what we generally classify as successful results.
Practice 4 more questions and get performance evaluation
Engage in quick quizzes to reinforce what you've learned and check your comprehension.
Question 1
What is the requirement for the number of trials in a binomial distribution?
💡 Hint: Think about how trials should be defined in advance to use the distribution.
Question 2
True or False: In a binomial distribution, the probability of success can change between trials.
💡 Hint: Consider whether changing odds affects statistical calculations.
Solve 1 more question and get performance evaluation
Push your limits with challenges.
Question 1
A factory produces light bulbs, where each bulb has a 90% success rate of passing quality control. If you test 15 bulbs, discuss whether or not this scenario can be modeled as a binomial distribution and support your answer.
💡 Hint: Check if all four conditions are satisfied.
Question 2
A student rolls a fair die three times, counting the number of times a 6 appears. Evaluate if this can be classified under binomial distribution criteria. What if, however, the die is not fair?
💡 Hint: Rethink the effects of probability consistency on classifications.
Challenge and get performance evaluation