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intro to sets and venn diagrams



summary
the content provides an in-depth exploration of solving word problems involving sets and venn diagrams, focusing on scenarios where members belong to multiple sets and how to interpret these relationships mathematically.
  • sets and venn diagrams are tools for categorizing members into groups based on shared characteristics, useful for solving certain types of word problems.
  • understanding the distinction between members belonging to 'only one set' versus 'both sets' is crucial for accurate problem-solving.
  • the process involves translating verbal information into mathematical equations using the regions of a venn diagram.
  • careful reading of the problem statement is essential to determine the correct mathematical approach, as slight changes in wording can significantly alter the meaning.
  • practice problems demonstrate how to apply these concepts to solve questions about the number of members in each set or region of a venn diagram.
chapters
00:04
introduction to sets and venn diagrams
01:14
interpreting venn diagrams
04:04
solving problems with venn diagrams
05:53
advanced problem-solving techniques

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text of the french/spanish question in the lesson

at a certain school of 200 student, the students can study french, spanish, both, or neither.  just as many study neither as study both.  one quarter of those who study spanish also study french.  the total number who study french is 10 fewer than those who study spanish only.  how many students study french only?   


q: when should i use a venn diagram and when should i use a double matrix?

a: great question! the answer depends on the characteristics of the population you're trying to consider.

the double matrix
a double matrix is most appropriate when each item/person in our population can be categorized in two different ways. everyone has to fit into two categories.

  • each member of the set has quality a or b and quality c or d.
  • everything must be in a or b, and everything must be in c or d.

for example, if we have males (a) and females (b) and who are either math majors (c) or not math major (d). we can put everything into a or b and then into c or d. so a double matrix works for this and would be most efficient.

venn diagrams
a venn diagram is best when we have multiple categories and all or some of the categories can overlap. when we have only two categories a and b that can overlap, our choices are:

  1. a and b both
  2. a, not b
  3. b, not a
  4. neither a nor b

we can use this formula to avoid double-counting the items that are in both a and b: all items = a + b + not a or b - in both a and b.

q: why do you say that 1/4(b + c) = b?

a: let's look at how this is built. first, we know that we are talking about a group called ""students who study spanish"" and that is b + c (all of the right circle). next, we also are talking about a group that is just the students who study french and spanish, which is just the shared region, b.

so if we know that one quarter of the students who study spanish also study french, we can use these two populations to create a fraction equal to one quarter: b/(b + c) = 1/4. this can be rearranged to (1/4)(b + c) = b like we show in the lesson video. you can multiply the entire equation by 4 to eliminate the fraction, and that is how we got the alternative equation b + c = 4b.

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