
Our system will evaluate the answer based on this AI-generated description.
The image contains a table outlining recycling attitudes across age groups, with percentages distributed as follows: age group 5-14 shows 8% actively recycle, 21% recycle when they remember, 52% don’t know anything about recycling, 19% preferred not to comment; age group 15-25 shows 59% actively recycle, 20% recycle when they remember, 8% don’t know anything about recycling, 13% preferred not to comment; age group 26-40 shows 48% actively recycle, 34% recycle when they remember, 7% don’t know anything about recycling, 14% preferred not to comment; age group 41-55 shows 47% actively recycle, 26% recycle when they remember, 7% don’t know anything about recycling, 20% preferred not to comment; age group 56-70 shows 39% actively recycle, 16% recycle when they remember, 28% don’t know anything about recycling, 17% preferred not to comment; age group 71+ shows 8% actively recycle, 34% recycle when they remember, 42% don’t know anything about recycling, 16% preferred not to comment.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
Skyrocket your IELTS band score by 1-2 points in under a month with our premium plan!
Note: Both the topic and the answer were created by one of our users.
The table gives information about what people of six different age categories think about recycling.
Overall, more people between the ages of 15 and 70 know about recycling and do it actively, than the respondents from the youngest and the oldest age group.
At less than 10%, those under 15 and over 71 represent the lowest number of people who actively recycle. This number increased over seven-fold to 59% for people aged 15 to 25. The remaining age categories varied between just under half to over one-third.
Over half of the under 15s did not know anything about recycling. At 4%, the lowest result of all survey was in the 26-40 age group. Although this figure doubled for the categories 15-25 and 41-55, they still represent a minority. Slightly more than quarter of those aged 56 to 70 knew nothing about recycling as well, a figure which is four times as big as the previous age category.
The percentage of those who recycle when they remember varied from one-fifth to just over one-third. Similarly, one-fifth of people aged between 41 and 55 opted not to give their opinion on recycling, with those under 15 just 1% behind. The remaining four categories were within a 4% range.
Word Count: 206