The table compares the number of two sorts of college students in Australia: local and international ones. Additionally, the provided pie charts illustrate the figure for each of them based on sexes expresses as percentages.
Overall, the data for both types of learners witnessed and upward trend over the period, albeit to varying extent. Notably, the figure for local students were constantly predominant over the period especially men.
At the starting point, the number of students who went abroad to Australia were 5,192. There were 9% of men, compared to only 4% that of women. Impressively, throughout the period of 9 years starting from 2001, the numbers of non-local students experienced around a three-folds growth from nearly 5,200 to around 14,600 learners, respectively. Impressively, the figure for non-local male participants outnumbered that of men, with 15% for the former and 12% for the latter.
The year 2001 witnessed a prominent attendance of Australian students with 33,657, constituting roughly 90% with the same interest among both sexes. Despite increasing in the number of local students in 2010 by roughly 6,000, because of the growth of non-local attendees, the percentage for this had fallen from 87% to 73%. Remarkably, the data for local learners in both sexes persistently kept the same, with 38% of men, 3% higher than the figure for women
