Arithmetic Sequences/Series
Geometric Sequences/Series
Counting
Probability
Final Jeopardy!
100

Find the formula that represents the nth term of the following sequence:

5, 11, 17, ...

6n - 1

or 

5 + 6(n-1)

100

Write a formula that represents the nth term of the following sequence:

20, 5, 1.25, ...

20(1/4)n-1

100

How many different outfits can you make from your closet if you have 10 different shirts, 4 different pairs of pants, and 7 different pairs of shoes if each outfit consisted of one shirt, one pair of pants, and one pair of shoes?

280

100

What is the probability of selecting a spade that is not a face card and not an ace from a standard deck of 52 playing cards?

9/52 or .173

200

How many terms are in the following sequence?

9, 12, 15, ..., 159

51

200

Find a10 of the following sequence:

-2, -8, -32, ...

-524,288

200

How many different ways can 16 movies be arranged on a shelf, taking 8 movies at a time?

518,918,400

200

A 12-sided die is rolled twice. What is the probability of rolling doubles (the two faces are the same number)?

1/12 or .0833

300

Find the sum of the first 15 terms of the following sequence:

29, 25, 21, ...

15

300

Find the sum of the first 7 terms of the following sequence:

9, 3, 1, ...

1093/81 

or

13.5

300

In a high school where there are 50 students and 22 are girls, how many different ways can the student council of 5 people be chosen if the council must consist of exactly 2 girls and 3 boys?

756,756

300

One card is selected at random from a standard deck of 52 playing cards. What is the probability that the card chosen is either a 7 through 10, OR a diamond? 

25/52 or .481

400

Find the 20th term of the sequence where a5 = 34 and a9 = 58. 

124
400

Find the sum of the following series:

3, -6, 12, -24, ...

No sum!

400

In a high school where there are 50 students and 22 are girls, how many different ways can the president, vice president, and secretary of the student council be chosen if AT LEAST one of those positions has to be a girl, but the other two positions could also be filled by girls?

51744

400

A woman has 22 pairs of shoes (no two pairs are the same). In the dark, she randomly selects two shoes from her closet. What is the probability that those two shoes are a matching pair?

1/21 or 22/462 or .048

400

Expand (2x - 3y)6.

64x6 - 576x5y + 2160x4y2 - 4320x3y3 + 4860x2y4 - 2916xy5 + 729y6

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