The bars chart given illustrate the two paragraphs in which the first one is about the percentage of males and females who were studied at intermediate school in four regions in the year of 2000. As well as the another which compare the percentage of girls and boys who were attending university with more complex education in the same year and regions.
Looking at the illustration, it is immediately evident that Europe had the most figure in both charts, whereas the opposite was true for Sub-Saharan Africa. Additionally, the gap between the figures of men and women are quite narrow, which was fixed for all regions.
In the first paragraph, which was devoted to the secondary students, we can easily see that about the male, Europe dominated the chart with approximately 97%, East Asia followed at 60% exactly, Latin American ranked third with the number of about 50%, which was roughly 15% higher than the figure of Sub-Saharan Africa. With regard to females, Europe still dominated the chart with exactly 100%; however, Latin American adjacented Europe with 60% instead of East Asia, which had ranked third at appropriately 55%, and finally, Africa possed about 21%.
In the second one, the men in Europe in the universities had the number of 60%, which was roughly 10% lower than the women. Additionally, Latin American boys were witnessed to be roughly 20%, about 8% bigger than the girls. In the region of East Asia, men and women looked familiar, nevertheless, the males were more lucky to be stand in front. Finally, the areas which had the lowest students in college, witnessed the domination of the boys at 5%, which was a bit higher than the women.
