The provided charts illustrate a comprehensive analysis of the average study duration of pupils in five distinguished higher educational establishments.
Overall, it is evident that most students in all universities prefer to study at weekdays which constitutes a considerable number of learning hours, while weekends show slight increases with a negligible proportion of study intervals.
In greater detail, the average number of hours students in University C studied stay at 10.6 at working days, which is on the leading position, but it then reduces to 7.8 hours at weekends. University B and University E make up 10.1 hours and 10 hours from Monday to Friday, respectively, before declining to 8.6 hours and 6.2 hours, in that order, at the end of the weeks.
Conversely, the study duration in University A and University D comprise fewest hours, which are under 10 hours at workdays. University A experience a modest decrease from 9.8 hours at weekdays to 9 hours at weekends, becoming the dominant organization. Meanwhile, the average number of study hours in University D falls considerably by 4 hours, from 9.6 to 5.6 over the given period, reaching the last place in question.
