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  1. The Maths Made Easy maths resources for relative frequency help studentS to revise this topic in great depth with questions, worksheets and revision.

  2. Sep 5, 2019 · Previous: Conditional Probability Practice Questions. Next: Independent Events Practice Questions. The Corbettmaths Practice Questions on Relative Frequency.

  3. Relative frequency is the number of times an event happens divided by the total number of outcomes that took place in an experiment, known as the number of trials. To calculate the relative frequency we can use the formula, \text{Relative frequency = }\frac{\text{frequency of event occurring}}{\text{total number of trials of the experiment}}

  4. This is the Maths Made Easy video on Probability - Relative Frequency (Video 2) To see our Probability - Relative Frequency (Video 2) online exam click the ...

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  5. Sep 27, 2019 · Previous: Conditional Probability Textbook Exercise. Next: Independent Events Textbook Exercise. The Corbettmaths Textbook Exercise on Relative Frequency.

  6. Formula. Relative frequency = frequency ÷ number of trials. If a dice was rolled 150 times and the result was a 4 in 25 of those rolls then the relative frequency of 4 was 25 ÷ 150 = 1 ⁄ 6. Expected frequency. The relative frequency of an outcome in one experiment can be used to calculate the expected outcomes of future experiments:

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  8. Revision notes on Relative & Expected Frequency for the AQA GCSE Maths syllabus, written by the Maths experts at Save My Exams.