The bar chart shows how many years both ganders took at a school, while two pie charts gives data about the percentage of people in Singapore who became significantly more educated from 2000 until 2010.
Overall,there was an increase in the number of years, for both sexes, that were spent on education. That the figure for males were slightly higher over the period. Additionally, pie charts highlight the distribution of variety education levels among adults in Singapore during 200 and 2010.
The bar chart reveals men were reaching the higher level from 2000 to 2010. In 2000 an average of 9 and 8 years spent in school for males and females, respectively. For the next two years, in 2002, female were remained steady at the previous number, around 8 years, while the males period of education expanded just under 10 years. Moreover, this tendency was also relevant for the next 8 years. In this period males expanded on education more pronounced to almost 12 years in school. While, females’ tendency during this period has remained consistent, approximately just under 8 years.
According to the pie charts, in 2000, almost one-third of Singapore’s population finished high school. The figures for those who only finished primary and secondary school were quite high, at approximately 26% each, compared to less than 10% of Singaporeans who had gained a bachelor’s or master’s degree. However, the level of education people was attaining had increased over the ten-year period, with nearly two-thirds of the population obtaining a university degree, and only 2.1% leaving after primary school.
