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Learn how to predict the chances of events and ace probability questions on the ISEE.
Have you ever wondered why some things happen more often than others? People have been asking that question for centuries. The study of probability (the math of chance) grew out of a simple desire: to understand games and gambling.
Long ago, people rolled dice made from animal bones. They noticed certain outcomes showed up more than others, but nobody had a formula to explain why. It took brilliant thinkers exchanging letters and ideas to turn luck into real math.
On the ISEE, you will see questions that ask you to find the chance of picking a certain item, rolling a number, or spinning a color. The good news? The basic formula is short and sweet. Let's learn it!
Before you solve any probability problem, you need a few key ideas. Think of these as the rules of the game. Once you know them, every problem follows the same pattern.
Let's look at a picture to make probability concrete. Imagine a bag with 10 marbles: 4 blue, 3 red, 2 green, and 1 yellow. The diagram below shows every marble and highlights the favorable outcomes for drawing a blue one.
Notice how we counted the blue marbles on top and put the total on the bottom. That fraction is the probability. On the ISEE, you will often need to simplify the fraction. Here, 4/10 simplifies to 2/5 because both the top and bottom divide evenly by 2.
Here is the one formula you need to memorize. Almost every ISEE probability question uses it.
Sometimes the ISEE asks for probability as a percent. To convert a fraction to a percent, divide the top by the bottom and multiply by 100. For example, 2/5 = 0.4 × 100 = 40%.
ISEE probability questions come in a few common flavors. Knowing what to expect helps you work faster on test day. Let's look at the main types.
No matter which picture appears in the problem, your strategy is the same. Count the favorable outcomes, count the total outcomes, and write the fraction. Then simplify if you can!
Let's walk through a full ISEE-style problem together. Follow each step carefully — this is exactly the process you should use on test day.
Knowing the formula is great, but smart test-taking strategies can save you time and help you avoid traps. Here are the most important tips.
| Strategy | Why It Helps | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Always simplify | Answer choices are usually in simplest form | 4/12 → 1/3 |
| Use the complement | Faster than counting many favorable outcomes | P(not 5) = 1 − 1/6 = 5/6 |
| Re-read the question | Prevents counting the wrong thing | "Not red" ≠ "red" |
| Eliminate wrong answers | If the answer must be less than 1/2, cross out anything ≥ 1/2 | 3 out of 8 → eliminate 5/8 and 1 |
| Never leave blank | No penalty for wrong answers on the ISEE | Guess after eliminating! |
The basic formula you learned today is the foundation for everything in probability. As you move into higher math, you will build on this skill. Here is a sneak peek at how things grow.
| What You Know Now | What Comes Next |
|---|---|
| Probability of one event: P(A) = favorable ÷ total | Probability of two events together (compound probability) |
| Complement: P(not A) = 1 − P(A) | "Or" questions: P(A or B) using addition rules |
| Equally likely outcomes (fair coins, dice) | Unequally likely outcomes and weighted probabilities |
| Counting by listing outcomes | Counting with multiplication (tree diagrams, permutations) |
Don't worry about the advanced stuff for now. On the ISEE Middle Level, you only need the basic formula and the complement rule. Master those two tools and you will be ready for every probability question on the test!
Time to practice! These five problems go from easy to challenging. Try each one before reading the answer. Remember: count favorable, count total, write the fraction, simplify.