5 report(s) found.
The bar chart illustrates the figures for men and women who studied engineering in an Australian college in 1992, 2002, and 2012. In general, the whole chart presented a fluctuation pattern, when its the highest figure indicated for men and the opposite was true for women. Men’s lead its fluctuation and remained from the first […]
The chart illustrates the amount of male and female learning engineering at Australian universities in three different years, decade apart (1992, 2002, 2012). Overall, the number of men studying engineering was significantly more than that of women over the period. However, we can observe increasing trend in the amount of female studying the same discipline. […]
The chart illustrates the amount of male and female learning engineering at Australian universities in three different years, decade apart (1992, 2002, 2012). Overall, the number of men studying engineering was significantly more than that of women over the period. However, we can observe increasing trend in the amount of female studying the same discipline. […]
The bar graph enumerates the number of engineering students compared by gender at Australian universities from 1992 to 2012. In general, male students dominated the number of students throughout the years in the engineering faculty at Australian universities. In addition, while the number of male students remained stable, the number of female students saw an […]
The bar chart illustrates the number of men and women studying engineering at Australian universities from 1992 to 2012. Overall, the men students experienced a remarkable rises, while the women students grew at a slower but steady rate during the period. In 1992, male students accounted for approximately 14000 of studying engineering, compared to 2000 […]
