The provided visual data illustrates the enrollment figures of students in various courses at a university during the year 2012.
Overall, it is evident that Social Sciences emerged as the most popular discipline, while Agriculture attracted the fewest students.
Focusing on the most populated fields, Social Sciences led with a total of 7,000 students, comprising 4,000 males and 3,000 females. Following closely was the Engineering course, which enrolled 3,500 students, predominantly male, with 2,500 men and 1,000 women. Meanwhile, Science and Maths recorded an equal gender representation, with both males and females totaling 3,000 students, split evenly at 1,500 each. In contrast, Health studies had a total of 2,000 students, featuring a disproportionate gender distribution marked by 1,500 females against only 500 males.
The Humanities course drew in 3,000 students, with females significantly outnumbering males at 2,000 and 1,000, respectively. The least populated course was Agriculture, which attracted a mere 1,500 students—500 males and 1,000 females. This disparity in enrollment numbers highlights a distinct gender preference across the various fields of study, particularly evident in the fields of Health and Humanities where female students formed the majority.
