A bag contains 4 red, 2 green and 1 blue ball. Two balls are drawn one after another without replacement.
At Higher tier, make sure your tree shows all possible colours at each stage before selecting the correct path.
This question is GCSE Higher because it involves a full tree diagram with three possible outcomes on the second draw. Unlike simpler Foundation questions, you must correctly account for all colours remaining after the first draw, even though only one final path is required.
The bag contains 7 balls in total: 4 red, 2 green and 1 blue. The first stage of the tree must therefore show three branches: Red, Green and Blue. Each branch must use the correct probability based on the original total of 7.
Once a ball has been drawn, it is not replaced. This means both the total number of balls and the number of each colour can change. For example, if a green ball is drawn first, there is now one fewer green ball, but the numbers of red and blue balls stay the same.
To build the tree correctly:
This structure is what makes the question suitable for Higher tier.
Once the tree is drawn, the probability of a specific sequence is found by multiplying along that path. For “Green then Red”, you multiply the probability on the Green branch by the probability on the Red branch coming from it.
A box contains 5 red, 3 green and 2 blue counters. Two counters are taken without replacement. Find the probability of drawing green then red.
For Higher tree-diagram questions, always show all possible outcomes at each stage, even if you only need one final path. This demonstrates full understanding and helps avoid logical errors.
Study tip: When there are three or more outcomes, slow down and label every branch carefully before doing any multiplication.
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