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GCSE Maths Probability Basics – Questions, Revision & Exam Tips | StudyVector
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GCSE Maths · Probability

Probability Basics

GCSE Maths revision for Probability Basics (Probability): exam-style practice and key ideas for AQA, Edexcel and OCR.

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Topic explanation

Probability at GCSE starts with the idea that probabilities fall between 0 and 1 (or 0% and 100%), with mutually exclusive and independent events handled carefully. Exam questions often combine fractions, tree diagrams, and short written justification.

Boards reward showing logical steps: listing outcomes, using P(A) + P(not A) = 1, and matching the event described in the question (especially "at least one", "exactly one", "given").

Key formulas & rules

  • P(A) = (number of favourable outcomes) / (total equally likely outcomes)
  • For mutually exclusive events: P(A or B) = P(A) + P(B)
  • For independent events: P(A and B) = P(A) × P(B)
  • Complement: P(not A) = 1 − P(A)

Common mistakes

  • Adding probabilities that are not mutually exclusive without adjusting for overlap.
  • Treating "without replacement" as independent — use conditional probabilities / reduced counts.
  • Using different denominators when combining branches on a tree without rescaling.

Exam tips

  • Draw a small tree or sample space for joint events — it reduces slips under time pressure.
  • Round only at the end if the question specifies decimal places; prefer exact fractions until then.
  • Read "and" vs "or" carefully; "at least one" often pairs well with the complement rule.

Practice questions

Exam-style questions aligned to your board. Open full practice for worked feedback and your next best question.

No preview items in the bank for this match yet — jump into practice to pull from the full GCSE Maths set.

Practice now — Probability Basics
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Related topics

  • Experimental Probability
  • Relative Frequency
  • Sample Spaces
  • Tree Diagrams
  • Venn Diagrams & Sets

More revision: GCSE Maths revision guides · All topic pages.