Our system will evaluate the answer based on this AI-generated description.
The image is a line graph titled "How teenagers in one US state communicated" showing percentages of teenagers using text messages, calls on cell phones, talk face-to-face, and email from Nov 2006 to Sep 2009. Nov 2006: text messages ~18%, calls on cell phones ~50%, talk face-to-face ~45%, email ~35%. Nov 2007: text messages ~30%, calls on cell phones ~45%, talk face-to-face ~40%, email ~20%. Feb 2008: text messages ~36%, calls on cell phones ~40%, talk face-to-face ~33%, email ~15%. Sep 2009: text messages ~55%, calls on cell phones ~35%, talk face-to-face ~30%, email ~10%. Text messages show a sharp upward trend, calls on cell phones and talk face-to-face show a downward trend, and email shows a gradual decline.
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 information illustrated on the line graph indicates how youngsters contacted each other in one USA state from 2006 to 2009.
Overall, text messages popularity rose gradually, becoming the most common communication channel by september 2009, while calls on cell phones prevalence went up slightly. In addition, face-to-face talks undergone fluctuations, reventually remaining at the same level, whereas emailing had a little parabolic movement, practically staying constant.
In November 2006 text messaging was not widespread, covering just under 30% of all teenagers, but in next almost 3 years great changes occured, making this communication approach the most common: more than a half of young people used in back in september 2009.
Cell phone calling, face-to-face talking together were used by vast majority of teen aged people, but like the emailing, their number of users remained almost the same by the september 2009.
Word Count: 142