Our system will evaluate the answer based on this AI-generated description.
The image shows: Year, 2000: 7-14 at 5%, 15-24 at 12%, 25-35 at 7%, 35+ at 1%; 2001: 7-14 at 7%, 15-24 at 14%, 25-35 at 9%, 35+ at 2%; 2002: 7-14 at 9%, 15-24 at 14%, 25-35 at 8%, 35+ at 2%; 2003: 7-14 at 10%, 15-24 at 17%, 25-35 at 8%, 35+ at 3%; 2004: 7-14 at 12%, 15-24 at 18%, 25-35 at 10%, 35+ at 3%; 2005: 7-14 at 13%, 15-24 at 19%, 25-35 at 11%, 35+ at 4%; 2006: 7-14 at 14%, 15-24 at 25%, 25-35 at 12%, 35+ at 5%; 2007: 7-14 at 16%, 15-24 at 50%, 25-35 at 12%, 35+ at 5%; 2008: 7-14 at 31%, 15-24 at 43%, 25-35 at 15%, 35+ at 9%; 2009: 7-14 at 30%, 15-24 at 38%, 25-35 at 25%, 35+ at 10%; 2010: 7-14 at 40%, 15-24 at 53%, 25-35 at 22%, 35+ at 13%; 2011: 7-14 at 35%, 15-24 at 48%, 25-35 at 21%, 35+ at 13%.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
Skyrocket your IELTS band score by 1-2 points in under a month with our premium plan!
Note: Both the topic and the answer were created by one of our users.
The diagram represents how proportions of people, going to the cinema, from different age groups changed in a country in Europe between 2000 and 2011.
Overall, the percentages of visitors increased for all age groups by the end of the period. People aged 15-24 tended to go to the movies more frequently than others. The opposite trend accounted for those over 35 years old.
In 2000 first ranked were visitors in the 15 to 24 year group, at 15%. Over 6 years, the share doubled, followed by a jump to 50% in 2007. A similar pattern was observed in the youngest category. Both groups experienced a significant drop in 2008 to the 2006 values; however, they restored back. By the end of the period, percentages sharted declining.
In contrast, the rates of people aged 25-35 and over 35 years old were the lowest in 2000, at 5% and about 2%, respectively. The proportions steadily rose with slight fluctuations, reaching 30% and 10% by 2011, accrodingly.
Word Count: 165