The line graph illustrates the number of male and female students who graduated from a Canadian university between 1992 and 2007, highlighting trends for both genders during the 15-year period.
It is clear that the number of graduates from both genders increased significantly throughout the given timeframe, although female graduates consistently outnumbered their male counterparts by a notable margin.
In 1992, approximately 70,000 male students graduated, compared to just under 100,000 female graduates. Both groups saw a modest rise by 1995, with a couple of thousand more graduates for each gender, but these numbers dipped back to their original levels by 1998. Afterward, the number of male graduates fluctuated slightly before experiencing steady growth, eventually reaching a peak of 95,000 by the end of the period in 2007. In contrast, the number of female graduates consistently rose from around 100,000 in 1998 to nearly 150,000 in 2007, which represents nearly double the increase seen in male graduates over the same timeframe, making the gap between the two groups even more significant.
