Mrs. Brown's class has 28 students. She is going to have students pick balls out of a bag. The bag contains 6 red balls, 2 blue balls, 1 green ball, and 1 gold ball. Each student in class pulls out a ball. The teacher records the result, and then the teacher replaces the ball. This process is repeated until each student has picked a ball. The results are in the table below. Ball Color Frequency Red 15 Blue 6 Green 4 Gold 3 Can you determine if Mrs. Browns probability is accurate by multiplying the ratio of red balls by the number of students in class? No, there is no way to predict the relative frequency. No, because replacing the balls does not provide an accurate representation of probability. Yes, the the result is 16.8 which is close to the frequency in the table of 15. Yes, the result is 15 exactly, which is the same as what the table is showing us.