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The image depicts a bar chart illustrating student accommodation preferences in percentage from the 1960s to the 2000s. In the 1960s "At home with own family" stands at 68%, "Students hall of residence" at 22%, "Paying guest with a host family" is 8%, "Room in a shared house or flat with other students" is approximately 2%. The 1970s show "At home with own family" decreasing slightly to around 63%, "Students hall of residence" drops to 17%, "Paying guest with a host family" marginally increases to 9%, and "Room in a shared house or flat with other students" rises to around 11%. During the 1980s, a significant shift occurs with "At home with own family" plummeting to 48%, "Students hall of residence" increases to 26%, while "Paying guest with a host family" decreases slightly to 7%, and "Room in a shared house or flat with other students" surges to nearly 19%. In the 1990s, "At home with own family" continues to decrease to 43%, "Students hall of residence" sees a slight drop to 24%, "Paying guest with a host family" remains stable at 7%, and "Room in a shared house or flat with other students" increases to approximately 26%. In the 2000s, "At home with own family" slightly rises around 45%, "Students hall of residence" increases to 27%, "Paying guest with a host family" again remains stable at 7%, and "Room in a shared house or flat with other students" sees a small increase to just above 26%.
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The bar graph illustrates the percentage change in types of student accommodation from the 1960s to the 2000s. The four categories displayed are: rooms in a shared house or flat with other students, students hall of residence, paying guest with a host family, and at home with their own family.
Overall, sharing houses with other peers and paying guests with the host family were the most popular choice. Over the period, the first one increased and reached its top by the 2000s, while the opposite was on the other one. Meanwhile, living in students’ apartments and staying with family experienced a slight decrease in the 2000s.
In the 1960s, both staying with other students and living with host families accounted for the highest percentage, at 35%. However, the two categories experienced opposite trends. On the one hand, living with other students rose rapidly and reached its peak of 70%, on the other hand, staying with a host family dramatically declined to only 5% in the 2000s.
During the same period, living in the hall of residence fluctuated slightly before falling to 13% in the 2000s. Also, the ratio of students staying at their own houses mildly decreased from 15% to 12% in the 2000s.
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