A highly rated community college has over 60,000 students and seven different campuses. One of its highest density classes offered is Introduction to Statistics. The statistics course is required for nearly every major offered at the college and therefore is considered a strategic course for the college. The college's leadership is very interested in the relationship between the class size of its statistics courses and students' final grades for the course. Specifically, the college is concerned with the low pass rate of some of its class sections and is determined to remedy the situation. The college's institutional research department recently collected data for analysis in order to support leadership's upcoming discussion regarding the low pass rate of some of its statistics class sections. Final grades from a random sample of 300 class sections over the last five years were collected. The research division also conducted analysis, using archived data, to determine the class size of these 300 class sections. The Class Number, Campus, Class Size, Average Final Grade, Number of "F"s, Average G.P.A. and Successful/Unsuccessful data were collected for these 300 class sections. StatCrunch Data Set Assume that the distribution of Average G.P.A. for all of the college's Introduction to Statistics class sections over the past five years has the same shape, mean, and standard deviation as the Average G.P.A. data. If it is reasonable based on your visual analysis of a histogram of the Average G.P.A. data, use the sample mean (2.66) and sample standard deviation (0.23) from the Average G.P.A. data together with the Normal distribution to answer all of the following questions. Calculate the probability of randomly selecting a class section from the population with an average G.P.A. less than 2.50. nothing% (Round to two decimal places as needed.) Calculate the probability of randomly selecting a class section from the population with an average G.P.A. greater than 3.00. nothing% (Round to two decimal places as needed.) Calculate the probability of randomly selecting a class section from the population with an average G.P.A. between 2.35 and 2.80. nothing% (Round to two decimal places as needed.) Calculate the average G.P.A. that represents the 90th percentile of all Introduction to Statistics class sections over the past five years. nothing (Round to two decimal places as needed.)