The two bar graphs set out a comparative picture of the average number of hours students studied per day across five different universities, covering both weekdays and weekends.
What stands out most prominently is that study Hours in weekdays remained largely unchanged in all institutions, while weekend figures fell markedly. Through both charts University C registered by far the highest weekday figure, whereas University D recorded the lowest weekend hours.
On weekdays, the figureS of all five universities bore a striking resemblance to one another, standing at approximately 9.6 to 10.6 hours. It was University C that recorded THE steepest weekday figure at 10.6 hours, only marginally above Universities B and E at 10.1 and 10 hours respectively. University D remained the lowest figure at 9.6, markedly higher than any university in weekends’ bar chart.
During weekends, studying hours declined precipitously among all universities. University D demonstrated an overwhelming preference for leisure over study, fell markedly to just 5.6 hours- the lowest across both charts. University A, by contrast, showed the smallest drop, recording 9 hours, marginally above University B at 8.6 hours. Finally, University C spent more hours on study than University E at 7.8 and 6.2 respectively.
