The graphs provide the information about the percentage of volunteers in New Zealand who assisted the sports organizations in the year 2010, categorized by their household types and the number of individuals performing various kinds of jobs within the same time interval.
The bar chart illustrates that couples with children who depend on them constituted the majority of volunteers, while the pie chart indicates that the most common roles to undertake in sports organizations were coaches, instructors, or teachers.
In detail, couples with dependent kids made up nearly half of all individuals, reaching 49.8 per cent. That was almost twice as many as the number of couples without reliant kids with the percentage of 26.9. In the meantime, the lone person group and volunteers with other household statuses had almost identical participation rates, accounting for 10.9% and 12.4% respectively.
As for the duties, approximately one third of about 655 thousand people involved, was working as coaches, instructors, or teachers. Committee members or administrators and scorers or timekeepers were the next most popular posts to fill with 158,600 and 128,000 workers respectively. While referees or umpires and others, including medical support role, represented the minority with a total sum of 161 thousand individuals.
