The bar and line charts illustrate the number of students choosing various types of courses in a university in 2012. Overall, females in social science, health, and humanities represented a growth, whereas the opposite was true for the remaining three figures among males. Notably, the total number of students exhibited a considerable decrease in these courses throughout that time.
Looking at the increase among women, the figure for social science ranked first with 4000 students, followed by men at under 3000. Similarly, health and science and math courses accounted for approximately 1800, respectively, while men stood at just 1000 and 1700 for each other throughout that period.
In terms of men’s growing level, engineering had the largest, with 2200, and for females, just 1000 in 2012. As for science and math, the figure for males made up almost 1400, and women were at only 800. The number of students choosing agriculture witnessed a stabilization rate, accounting for almost 300 for both genders.
Regarding the total, it was at 7000 in social science before this figure demonstrated a noticeable fall, making up 3000. Therefore, it recorded a steady decrease, falling from almost 2000 to 300.
