🔥 Today Only: Save 30% on Premium — Offer Ends Soon! - Upgrade Now!
Pie Chart

Band 6+: The pie charts below illustrate the number of journal articles read per week by all students, PhD students, and junior lecturers at an Australian university.

Image for topic: The pie charts below illustrate the number of journal articles read per week by all students, PhD students, and junior lecturers at an Australian university.
Our system will evaluate the answer based on this AI-generated description.
The image displays three pie charts: first chart, all students: 1 to 5 (Number of journal articles read per week: 67%), 6 to 11 (21%), 12+ (12%); second chart, PhD students: 1 to 5 (15%), 6 to 11 (80%), 12+ (5%); third chart, junior lecturers: 1 to 5 (75%), 6 to 11 (24%), 12+ (1%).
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
Note: Both the topic and the answer were created by one of our users.

The graphics represent the number of journal articles read per week by all students, PhD students, and junior lecturers at an Australian university. Overall, PhD students read journal articles more than others while junior lecturers read the average amount of them and all students read the least.

Firstly, 80% of PhD students read more than 12 articles per week, which is the largest share while 24% of junior lecturers read the same amount of articles. Junior lecturers read from 6 to 11 articles at 75% whereas PhD students read at 15%. PhD and junior lecturers read least of all 1 to 5 articles, PhD – 5% and Junior lecturers – 1%.

Less than PhDs and Junior lecturers read all other students. 67 % of them read 1 to 5 articles per week. 21% of them read 6 to 11 articles while only 12% read more than 12 articles.

Word Count: 148

Answers On The Same Topic:

The pie charts below illustrate the number of journal articles read per week by all students, PhD students, and junior lecturers at an Australian university.

The pie chart shows the data of the journal articles read per week by all students, PhD students, and junior lecturers at an Australian university. In general, more than 50% students, which around 67%, read up to 5 journal articles per week. Only 12% read more than 12 journal articles per week. It shows quite […]

The pie charts below illustrate the number of journal articles read per week by all students, PhD students, and junior lecturers at an Australian university.

The pie charts illustrate the weekly reading habits of journal articles among three distinct categories of readers at an Australian university. Overall, most students preferred reading between 1 and 5 articles each week, while the majority of Ph.D. scholars opted for more than 12. Junior lecturers tended to read between 6 and 11 articles on […]

The pie charts below illustrate the number of journal articles read per week by all students, PhD students, and junior lecturers at an Australian university.

The pie charts compares the proportion of journal articles read by all students, PHD students and jounior lecturers per week at an Australian university. It is clear that the per highest percentage of journal articles read by PHD students, All studen and junior lecturreges 12+, while the proportion of journal anticles read by same individuals […]

The pie charts below illustrate the number of journal articles read per week by all students, PhD students, and junior lecturers at an Australian university.

The three pie charts illustrate the number of journal articles read by all students, PhD students, and junior lecturers on a weekly basis. Overall, it is evident that the greatest amount of articles were read by PhD students while all students read the minimum quantity of articles. Moreover, junior lecturers read a decent number of […]

The pie charts below illustrate the number of journal articles read per week by all students, PhD students, and junior lecturers at an Australian university.

The given pie charts provide information on how many academic papers were read by all student populations, PhD students and junior lectures at a particular Australian university per week. Overall, most students preferred reading between 1 and 5 articles each week, while the majority of PhD scholars opted for more than 12. Meanwhile, junior lecturers […]

See All

Other Topics:

The pie charts below show the devices people in the 18 to 25 age group use to watch television in a European country in two different years.

The pie charts illustrate different devices which people between 18 and 25 used to watch television in a European country in 2007 and in 2017. Overall, it is immediately clear that the major device priorities shifted over a decade, with Conventional TV declining signifivantly to become a lower priority, while flat-screen TV and mobile phone […]

The charts below show the percentage of volunteers by organizations in 2008 and 2014

The pie charts illustrate the figure of participation in the organization over 6 years, starting from 2008 to 2014. Overall, it can be seen that the percentage of participants in the educational sector is the highest, while the health care sector accounted for the lowest percentage in 2008. By contrast, the environmental sector made up […]

the charts below show changesnin the proportion of energy produced from different resources in a country in 1985 and 2003

The pie charts provide information regarding the proportions of energy generated from six distinct resources in a particular nation from 1985 to 2003. Overall, it is evident that most of the amount of energy was produced by oil, making up the highest share during the surveyed period. Other resources took up more moderate levels in […]

The charts below give information about the people use public library and the main reasons to visit in Britain in 1991 in 2000.

The pie chart compares the proportion of people who use visit public libraries for different reasons in the UK in 1991 and 2000. Overall, the total number of library visits remained unchanged in both years. It can be seen that borrowing and returning books was always the most popular purpose over the period while obtaning […]

The pie chart below show the percentage distribution of the houshold expenditure in a country in 2010 and 2020.

The given pie charts show the information about the percentage distribution of household expenditure in a country in 2010 and 2020. Overall, it is clear that expenses in a country are very common. To be specific, housing accounts for a significant share in total expenditure in a country. While categories also contribute in total expenditure. […]

The pie chart below show the average household expenditures in a country in 1950 and 2010 summarise the information by selecting and reporting the main features and make conversion where relevant

The pie chart provide the information regardless of household spending in both Japan and Malaysia in 2010. Overall, it is clear that households in Japan spend the largest proportion on other goods and services, whereas housing accounts for the largest share in Malaysia. By contrast, health care represents the smallest category in both countries. In […]

See All
We have detected unusual activity on your device.
Please verify your identity to continue.
Note: This verification step won't sign you in. If you have a premium account, please log in to access the service as usual.
Google/Gmail Verification
Or verify using Email/Code
We've sent a verification code to:
youremail@gmail.com (Not your email?)
Enter it below to complete the verification process.
Ensure your email address is correct, your inbox is not full, and you check your spam folder. If no email arrives, consider using an alternative email.
You will need a Premium plan to perform your action!
Note: If you already have a premium account, please log in to access our services as usual.

Plans & Pricing

Our mission is to make quality education accessible for everyone.
However, to keep our hardworking team running and this service alive, we genuinely need your support!
By opting for a premium plan, not only do you sustain us in achieving the mission, but you also unlock advanced features to enrich your learning experience.

Free

For learners who aren't pressed for time

What's included on Free
100+ Cambridge IELTS Tests
Instant IELTS Writing Task 1 & 2 Evaluation (2 times/month)
Instant IELTS Speaking Part 1, 2, & 3 Evaluation (5 times/month)
Instant IELTS Writing Task 1 & 2 Essay Generator (2 times/month)
500+ Dictation & Shadowing Exercises
100+ Pronunciation Exercises
Flashcards
Other Advanced Tools

Premium

For those serious about advancing their English proficiency, and for IELTS candidates aspiring to boost their band score by 1-2 points (especially in writing & speaking) in just 30 days or less

What's included on Premium
Save Your IELTS Test Progress
Unlock All Courses & IELTS Tests
Unlimited AI Conversations
Unlimited AI Writing Enhancement Exercises
Unlimited IELTS Writing Task 1 & 2 Evaluation
Unlimited IELTS Speaking Part 1, 2, & 3 Evaluation
Checked Answers Will Not Be Published
Unlimited IELTS Writing Task 1 & 2 Essay Generator
Unlimited IELTS Speaking Part 1, 2, & 3 Sample Generator
Unlimited Usage Of Advanced Tools
Priority Support within 24h (12-month plan only)

Due to the nature of our service and the provided free trials, payments are non-refundable.
Nếu bạn là người Việt Nam và không có hoặc không muốn trả bằng credit/debit cards, bạn có thể thanh toán bằng phương thức chuyển khoản:



Chọn gói:
419,000₫ 277,000 ₫ cho gói 1 tháng (chỉ 9,233₫/ngày)
1,239,000₫ 597,000 ₫ cho gói 3 tháng (chỉ 6,633₫/ngày)
2,469,000₫ 1,027,000 ₫ cho gói 6 tháng (chỉ 5,706₫/ngày)
4,929,000₫ 1,417,000 ₫ cho gói 12 tháng (chỉ 3,936₫/ngày)


Sau khi chuyển khoản, vui lòng đợi trình duyệt tự động điều hướng bạn trở lại Engnovate và bạn sẽ ngay lập tức nhận được mã kích hoạt tài khoản premium.
Nếu có lỗi xảy ra, bạn có thể liên hệ với team thông qua một trong các phương thức: email đến helloengnovate@gmail.com hoặc nhắn tin qua facebook.com/engnovate.
Vì toàn bộ công cụ trên website đều có thể sử dụng thử miễn phí, Engnovate không hỗ trợ hoàn tiền.