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  1. Free Group Combinations Calculator - Given an original group of certain types of member, this determines how many groups/teams can be formed using a certain condition. This calculator has 3 inputs.

  2. Probability that 4 friends will be in the same class. A group of 60 second graders is to be randomly assigned to two classes of 30 each. Five of the second graders, Marcelle, Sarah, Michelle, Katy, and Camerin, are close friends.

  3. 4 men and 4 women are going to stand next to each other for a group photograph. Given that the way they stand next to each other is completely random, determine the probability that no 2 men and no 2 women stand next to each other.

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  4. As the size of a group increases: The number of possible person-to-person links (L) increases rapidly as the size of the group (N) increases (L = (N² - N) /2). In a four-member group there are six possible pairings; add a fifth member for each of the four to relate to and you have ten pairs.

  5. Georg Simmel (1858–1915) wrote extensively about the difference between a dyad, or two-member group, and a triad, which is a three-member group (Simmel 1902). In the former, if one person withdraws, the group can no longer exist.

  6. Georg Simmel (1858–1915) wrote extensively about the difference between a dyad, or two-member group, and a triad, which is a three-member group (Simmel 1902). In the former, if one person withdraws, the group can no longer exist.

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  8. a collection of people who exist in the same place at the same time, but who don't interact or share a sense of identity. authoritarian leader. a leader who issues orders and assigns tasks. Bureaucracies.

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