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Mathematics, 20.09.2019 21:00 daonewest09

Orange m& m’s: the m& m’s web site says that 20% of milk chocolate m& m’s are orange. let’s assume this is true and set up a simulation to mimic buying 200 small packets of milk chocolate m& m’s. each packet contains 55 candies. we made this dotplot of the results. now suppose that we buy a small packet of m& m’s. we find that 9% (5 of the 55) of the m& m’s are orange. what can we conclude from the sampling distribution? group of answer choices this result is surprising because it is unlikely that we will select a random sample with only 9% orange candies if 20% of milk chocolate m& m’s are orange. this result is surprising because we expect the orange candies to make up at least 20% of the candies in a packet. this result is not surprising because we expect to see many samples with less than 9% orange candies. this result is not surprising because random samples are expected to vary.

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