
Our system will evaluate the answer based on this AI-generated description.
The image is a table with five rows and five columns. The first column headers are "Male employees," "Female employees," "Total employees," and "Factories." The rows are labeled with years 1851 to 1901 in increments of 10 years. In 1851, male employees were 287,100, female employees were 190,000, total employees were 477,100, and there were 225 factories. In 1861, male employees dropped to 131,780, female employees to 160,000, total employees to 291,780, and factories increased to 227. By 1871, male employees decreased to 80,123, female employees to 60,000, total to 140,123, and a significant jump in factories to 622. In 1881, male employees were 76,132, female employees at 50,000, total employees at 126,132, and factories rose to 721. By 1891, male employees fell to 65,000, female to 40,000, total to 105,000, and factories dropped to 625. Finally, in 1901, male employees were 31,000, female employees at 30,000, total employees at 61,000, and factories reduced to 600.
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 given table compares the number of employees and factories producing silk in England and Wales from 1851 and 1901.
It is noticeable that the total number of employees declined dramatically over the period shown. By contrast, the number of factories increased significantly after 50 years.
In 1851, almost 130,750 people worked in producing silk factories, and about 60% of them are women. Even though the number of workers in this industry dropped, with only 38,942 employees in total at the end of the period, female still accounted for more than a half of labours.
The number of factories experienced a totally different trend. In 1851, there are only 272 across the countries. However, in the next ten years, it increased by almost 3 times and peaked at 761 factories. The figure fluctuated in the following years and dropped to 623 factories in 1901.
Word Count: 144