The bar chart depicts a breakdown of the typical study hours of students from five different universities on weekdays and weekends.
Overall, it is evident that students spend more time learning on weekdays than on weekends. Additionally, University C has the greatest average amount of time for schooling on weekdays, while on weekends, University A constituted the longest hour of study.
A closer examination of the data underscores the dominance of schooling hours in University C, where 10.6 hours were spent on education, followed closely by University B with the figure of 10.1 hours which is 0.1 higher than University E. Finally, Universities A and E demonstrate comparable rates, which are at 9.8 and 9.6 hours.
Regarding weekends, students at University A emerge as the most dedicated, averaging a substantial 9 hours of studying. However, the figures for Universities B and C exhibit slightly lower rates, at 8.6 and 7.8 hours sequentially. In contrast, University E witnessed 6.2 hours, while University D displayed a marked divergence from this trend, with just only 5.6 hours throughout the weekends.
