Practise working with overlapping sets to find probabilities involving unions of events.
Always subtract overlapping outcomes to avoid counting them twice.
This question explores a key Higher GCSE concept: calculating the probability of a combined event using the inclusion–exclusion principle. When an event involves the word “or”, you are dealing with the union of two sets. In probability, the formula is:
P(A ∪ B) = P(A) + P(B) − P(A ∩ B)
This prevents double-counting outcomes that appear in both sets. Here, the two relevant sets are the set of all red cards and the set of all face cards. Because some cards belong to both groups (the red face cards), the overlap must be subtracted.
This reasoning is essential for higher-tier probability, where overlapping sets frequently appear.
There are 26 black cards (Spades and Clubs) and 4 Queens altogether. Among these, 2 Queens are black. Applying inclusion–exclusion: 26 + 4 − 2 = 28 favourable outcomes. Probability = 28/52.
Diamonds: 13 cards. Face cards: 12 cards. Overlap: 3 (J♦, Q♦, K♦). Total favourable: 13 + 12 − 3 = 22. Probability = 22/52.
Red cards: 26. Aces: 4. Overlap: 2 (Ace of Hearts and Ace of Diamonds). Total favourable: 26 + 4 − 2 = 28. Probability = 28/52.
The inclusion–exclusion principle is widely used in computer science (search filters, data overlap), statistics (survey overlaps), and probability-based games. Understanding overlapping sets helps when analysing card games, working with probability trees, solving Venn diagram problems, and calculating combined event likelihoods in real scenarios.
Q: Why do red face cards cause double-counting?
A: Because they belong to both groups — red cards and face cards.
Q: Does the fraction simplify?
A: Yes. 32/52 simplifies to 8/13, but unsimplified forms are acceptable unless the exam insists.
Q: Are Jokers included?
A: No. Standard GCSE decks have 52 cards.
Whenever a probability question includes the word “or”, sketch a quick Venn diagram. It helps you visualise the overlap and prevents double-counting.
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