A student touches a rubber ball with a negatively charged plastic rod. How will the negative charges be distributed on the ball?

When a student touches a rubber ball with a negatively charged plastic rod, the negative charges from the plastic rod will transfer onto the rubber ball temporarily. As both objects are insulators, the negative charges will distribute themselves evenly on the surface of the rubber ball, causing a repulsion of like charges to occur. This means that the negative charges will repel each other, spreading out as much as possible on the surface of the ball and resulting in an even distribution of negative charges.