Essay task 1: number of male and female university students, grouped into british home and international

home and international, male versus female, students

The two bar charts, one for men and the other for women, plot the numbers of university students in the UK who were enrolled in tertiary education annually between 2010 and 2012. It also divides them into two groups by their original status: British national and foreign.

Overall, there were many more UK students compared to international. The numbers for all combinations of gender and status increased over time, except for British male students, which had a substantial dip in 2011. Female students outnumbered the males in 2011; the reverse was the case for the other two years.

In detail, total student counts rose over these three years, going up by nearly 50%, from 105,000 in 2010 to 148,000 in 2012; in these two years, the majority were male, 59 and 82 thousand, respectively. Conversely, in 2011, more than half were female, 62,000. In 2010, the ratio of foreign to British home students for each gender was about 1:2, with 20,000 males and about 14,000 females coming from abroad. In the other two years, the British ones still heavily dominated in female students, averaging about 45,000 out of 63,000 students, whereas for their counterparts, they only edged out the ones from abroad by only one and four thousand in 2011 and 2012, respectively.

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The two bar charts, one for men and the other for women, show the number of university students in the United Kingdom who were enrolled in higher education each year between 2010 and 2012. They are also divided into two groups according to their original status: British nationals and foreign nationals.

Overall, there were many more British students than international students. Numbers for all combinations of gender and status have increased over time, with the exception of male British students, who experienced a significant decline in 2011. Female students outnumbered male students in 2011; the reverse was true in the other two years.

Specifically, the total number of students in these three years increased by almost 50%, from 105,000 in 2010 to 148,000 in 2012; in these two years, the majority of students were male, 59 and 82,000, respectively. In 2011, however, more than half were female, 62,000. In 2010, the ratio of foreign to British students for each gender was about 1:2, with 20,000 males and about 14,000 females. In the other two years, the British still strongly dominated among female students, averaging about 45,000 out of 63,000 students, while in 2011 and 2012 they outnumbered foreign students by only one and four thousand, respectively.

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