The experimental probability of a certain event is the proability for that event to happen, "suggested" by some empiric experiments, instead of pure theory.
For example, we know that a fair coin has a 50% chance of landing on heads or tails. But if you throw a coin 100 times, with 60 heads and 40 tails, you would say that the probability for heads to show is 60%.
In your exercise, Jenny tried the experiment 50 times, and got a pink tile 18 times. So, according to her results, the probability of pulling a pink tile is
![\frac{\text{number of times a pink tile was pulled}}{\text{total number of experiments}} = (18)/(50)](https://img.qammunity.org/2019/formulas/mathematics/middle-school/s15qy8yt7lk76vltbycf54laczl3ajq76b.png)