Combinatorics Problem: Choosing Couples in a Dance Class with 22 Students

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Homework Help Overview

The problem involves combinatorics, specifically focusing on selecting and pairing students in a dance class consisting of 22 students, with 10 women and 12 men. The task is to determine the number of ways to choose 5 men and 5 women and then pair them off.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Problem interpretation

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • The original poster attempts to calculate the number of possible couples by multiplying the number of choices for each couple sequentially. Some participants question the validity of this reasoning and suggest that it may not account for the distinct pairings correctly.

Discussion Status

Participants are exploring different methods to approach the problem, with some offering simpler examples to clarify the pairing concept. There is an ongoing discussion about how to correctly count the combinations and pairings without reaching a consensus yet.

Contextual Notes

Participants are considering the implications of choosing subsets from a larger group and the rules of pairing, which may not have been fully articulated in the original problem statement.

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Homework Statement


A dance class consists of 22 students, of which 10 are women and 12 are men. If 5 men and 5 women are to be chosen and then paired off, how many results are possible?


Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution


We can say that for the first couple, there are a pool of 12 possible men to choose from and a pool of 10 possible women to choose from. So there are 12x10=120 possible couples. For the second couple, there are a pool of 11 men and a pool of 9 women. So 9x11=99. and so on until we get to the fifth couple (8x6=48). Then we add all the numbers together (120+99+80+63+48=410 possible 5 couple combinations). Is this the correct reasoning? I feel I'm missing something here.
 
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The reasoning is not correct. Consider a much simpler problem: you have two men, two women and you want to pair them into couples, how many ways can you do this? If we let the men be A and B, and the women be 1 and 2, then the only two distinct pairs of couples we have are:

(A,1) and (B,2)
(A,2) and (B,1)

so the answer for this is two. But by your previous reasoning we would conclude that the answer is 2*2 + 1*1 = 5.
 
Okay, so what would be a correct approach?
 
Given 10 men, how many ways can you pick 5 men out of it?
Given 12 women, how many ways can you pick 5 women out of it?
Given 5 men and 5 women, how many couples can you make?
 

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