The given bar charts demonstrate the proportion of smartphone ownership in a chosen country between 2000 and 2010, and compare it in terms of education level in 2000 and 2010.
Upon analyzing the data, it is evident that the percentage of residents who own smartphones at each level of education tends to increase over 10 years. As a result, the total rate of smart tool ownership rises throughout the period.
To begin with, in both timelines, the higher the level of education the figures achieved, the higher the percentage of people owning intelligent devices, but the disparity narrows between the two chosen time marks. The proportion of people who do not have and have achieved high school certification was dramatically low, around 15% and approximately 30%. In contrast, the rate of ownership was relatively high, which tripled the non-certification rate and doubled the High School graduate rate. The percentage of individuals having a bachelor’s degree is nearly twofold the below level, resulting in a closer gap with the remaining cohort. The two remaining groups had the same pattern, with the disparity from the data between 2000 and 2010 remaining unchanged.
To continue with, the chosen country witnessed an upward tendency from 2000 to 2010. Specifically, the rate of smartphone ownership rises by about 6% every 2 years, which was exactly 40% in 2000 and changed to over 50% in 2004. Following that, the progress became twice as fast as the first 4 years, which made the proportion soar up to over 80% in the final year. Precisely, the percentage of smartphone owners doubled over a period of 10 years.
