The chart illustrates the number of men and women in further education in Britain in 3 decades from 1970 to 1990, and wether they were studying full-time or part-time.
The most noticable trends from 3 decades from the charts are men with part-time education in further education seems to be steady in the numbers, whereas women seems to have a noticably huge incline. On the other hand, the chart illustrates men with further education that studying full-time have a significant and consistently rising, similarly with women in further education with full-time education also shown to have a rising numbers.
In 1970, both men and women for full-time and part-time education the number are less than 200. Furthermore, in 1980 and 1990, both men and women in full-time education finally hit 200 in numbers.
Subsequently, for both and women in part-time education, the numbers are various. For men in 1970 they have 1000 men, and the number declined in 1980 to about 850, however in climbs back up in 1990 to 900 men almost 1000. While for women, it shows the consistent growth, in 1970 the number shows less than 800, and kept growing in 1980 to 800, and huge growth until 1990 that the number hits almost 1200.
