Question:

Imagine you have a huge jar of candies that are a generic

Last updated: 7/9/2022

Imagine you have a huge jar of candies that are a generic

Imagine you have a huge jar of candies that are a generic version of M&Ms. We know that 40% of the candies in the jar are brown. Imagine that you create a sample by randomly pulling 20 candies out of the jar. If you repeated this 10 times to create 10 samples, each with 20 candies, about how many browns would you expect to find in each of the 10 samples? Note: Out of 20 candies, one would expect 8 brown candies (40% of 20 = 8). A. Each sample would have exactly 8 brown candies. B. Most of the samples would have 0 to 8 brown candies. C. Most of the samples would have 8 to 20 brown candies. D. Most of the samples would have 6 to 10 brown candies. OE. You are just as likely to get any count of brown candies between 0 and 20.