Let's look at your first answer of 1320. I do not agree. Let's label the pears a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h, i, j, k, m, and n.
If the order in which you draw your sample matters, then you are correct that the number of possible samples is
[MATH]\dfrac{12!}{(12 - 3)!}[/MATH].
But in fact you do not care what order you select a, b, and c. That represents
[MATH]3![/MATH] of each ordered sample.
So your first answer should be [MATH]\dfrac{12!}{(12 - 3)! * 3!} = \dfrac{1320}{6} = 220.[/MATH].
If the order in which you draw your sample matters, then you are correct that the number of possible samples is
[MATH]\dfrac{12!}{(12 - 3)!}[/MATH].
But in fact you do not care what order you select a, b, and c. That represents
[MATH]3![/MATH] of each ordered sample.
So your first answer should be [MATH]\dfrac{12!}{(12 - 3)! * 3!} = \dfrac{1320}{6} = 220.[/MATH].