The bar graphs illustrate how many hours, on average, students in five universities spend on studying.
Overall, during weekdays, University C’s students allocate the highest amount of time for academic pursuit, while this is the case for those in university A on weekends. Additionally, the study activity of students of University D accounts for the lowest number of hours for the whole week.
On weekdays, students of University C spend time learning the most, at 10.6 hours, followed closely by the figures for Universities B and E, at 10.1 and 10 hours, respectively. Meanwhile, the number of hours for academic practice of University A’s and D’s students is slightly lesser, at 9.8 and 9.6 hours, in that order.
On weekends, however, students of University A spend the highest amount of time on learning, at 9 hours, exceeding other Universities. Similarly, it takes 8.6 hours for students of University B to study, surpassing that of University C’s students, at 7.8 hours. Finally, the academic activity of students of University E takes 6.2 hours, 0.6 hours more than University D, which is the lowest.
