The table illustrates the amount of American people’s typical weekly incomes with their professional degrees (doctoral degree, professional degree, master’s degree, bachelor’s degree, no degree, high school diploma, and less than a high school diploma), while the bar graph gives information about the proportion of unemployment level in 2005. Units are measured in dollars for table.
Overall, the highest observed amount of money gained was in professional degree. People with less than a high school diploma was the most likely to be unemployed, whilst citizens with professional and doctoral degree were the least likely to be unemployed.
In terms of table, the amount of money earned people with professional degree was significantly higher than that of other degrees, reaching a total of 1800. Similarly, people with doctoral degree (1740) were considerably higher than master’s degree (1560) and bachelor’s degree (1246). Citizens with no degree and high school diploma were relatively at the same amount, with 840 and 701, respectively. People with less than a high school diploma earned the lowest amount of money which was just under 600.
With regard to bar graph, the percentage of society with less than a high school diploma (8.2%) almost doubled that of people with no degree (4.3%). The unemployment level of bachelor’s degree was marginally higher than that of people with master’s degree, by 0.2%. The percentage of professional and doctoral degree was at the same rate, with 1.5%.
