A glance at the graph provided reveals the data about how many people graduated Canadian universities in a 15-year period between 1992 and 2007. The graph splits up graduates into two trends: females and males. While the x-axis determines the year of the graduation with a 2-year intervals, the y-axis depicts numbers of graduates themselves with gaps of 10000 people.
Overall, from the graph it can deprived that both women and men had an increasing trend in university graduates in Canada. However, there are more females who finished educational places than males.
Looking at the graph, the female part of accomplished students always had higher rates than the male part. In 1992, nearly 100000 women finished the university, but only 70000 men did it, after which there was a steady rise in both tendencies with approximately 105000 females and slightly over 75000 males in 1995. Next, in 1998, both flows experienced a decrease, when numbers became as initials ones for both genders, 100000 women and 70000 men again. In following years, all two trends for females and males rocketed closely to 150000 and 95000, respectively, until the end of the given time period. Ultimately, women became the superior part of Canadian universities’ graduates, at a whopping 150000 in 2006.
