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The image displays a bar chart illustrating the number of teaching hours per year for teachers across three educational levels in four countries during 2001. For Japan, the hours were 600 for Primary, 600 for Lower Secondary, and approximately 620 for Upper Secondary. In Spain, both Primary and Lower Secondary teachers taught for 600 hours, while Upper Secondary teachers taught for approximately 980 hours. In Iceland, Primary school teachers had 600 teaching hours, Lower Secondary had 800, and Upper Secondary had approximately 780. The USA's figures were approximately 840 hours for Primary, approximately 1080 hours for Lower Secondary, and 1100 hours for Upper Secondary.
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The provided graph illustrated the work hours of teachers per year from the Japan, Spain, Iceland, and USA.
USA upper secondary and lower secondary teachers spent the most hours among the other countries, being around 1100 hours in 2001. Yet, primay teachers teaching hours was nearly 900 hours, considerably lower than the other two. Meanwhile, teachers from lower secondary and upper secondary from Iceland taught 800 hours in a year, which is even lower than USA primary teacher’s teaching hours. While Iceland primary teachers’ teaching hour was 600 hours.
Both primary Teachers and lower secondary teachers from Spain taught at 600 hours. However, upper secondary teachers’ teaching hours were 400 hours higher than those two, sat almost equal to the USA lower and upper secondary teachers.
Out of all countries, Japan’s teaching hours of primary, lower secondary and upper secondary lay at 600 hours. So, Japan teachers’ teaching hours were the lowest in the graph compared to other countries.
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