Posts Tagged ‘math games using playing cards kids’
Math Games Using Playing Cards
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Question: This is a hard math question?
"Euchre is a popular card game played with a partial deck of ordinary cards. Only 24 cards are used: the 9, 10, Jack, Queen, King, and Ace of each suit (hearts, spades, diamonds, and clubs). Consider the experiment of drawing cards from a Euchre deck until a club is drawn. After each draw the card is replaced and the deck is shuffled." Then it asks "complete the table below for a theoretical probability distribution for the number of draws to get a club. The first column in the table reads "number of draws to get first club" and the values are 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 or more i'm supposed to find the probability for each value.
Answer: For every draw, there are 6 clubs out of 24 so the prob of drawing a club is 1/4.
And since you put back the card you drew, it remains 1/4.
P(first draw) = 1/4
P(second draw) = (3/4)*(1/4) (it's a 3/4 prob you didn't draw a club the first time)
P(third draw) = (3/4)^2*(1/4) (it's a (3/4)^2 prob you didn't draw a club the first and 2nd times)
In general, P(on draw n) = (3/4)^(n-1)*(1/4)
Math Fluency pt.2: Math Games
Math Games Using Playing Cards Kids
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Question: What Do You Think, Can Teaching Poker/Blackjack To Kids be "Educational"?
I work as a homework aide in an afterschool program so one day I brought over my card and chips set.
The boss got mad at me when she found out I was playing poker and blackjack with the kids (mainly third and fourth grade) and she said that we can only play educational games.
I was thinking that you need to know math and numbers to play poker and blackjack, especially if you use chips so you know how much money is at stake.
I think card-playing can be "educational".
Answer: What? Of course it can. Poker requires counting chips as you said, and both games require logic and reasoning. I mean, I understand that you're not going to find a World Series of Poker set in the educational aisle of the toy store, but there absolutely is educational value in it.
Overhand Shuffle


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