5 report(s) found.
The line graph illustrates the percentage of teenagers aged 12 to 19 in one particular state in the United States of America who used 4 different methods of communication (text messages, calls on cell phones, face-to-face, and email) from 2006 to 2009. Overall, it can be seen that the text messaging was the most popular […]
The line graph provides information on the communication methods used by teenagers aged 12 to 19 in the US from November 2006 to September 2009. It illustrates four different methods of communication—text messaging, cell phone calls, face-to-face conversations, and email—over this three-year period. Overall, it is evident that texting was the most popular method, peaking […]
The information illustrated on the line graph indicates how youngsters contacted each other in one USA state from 2006 to 2009. Overall, text messages’ popularity rose gradually, becoming the most common communication channel by September 2009, while calls on cell phones’ prevalence went up slightly. In addition, face-to-face talks underwent fluctuations, eventually remaining at the […]
The line graph illustrates four means of communication used by American adolescents, aged from 12 years old to 19 years old to contact each other in a US state from November 2006 to September 2009. Overall, communication preferences by text messages and phone calls experienced the upward trends, whereas the opposite trend can be seen […]
The graph shows data about how many methods of communication were used by teenagers aged 12-19 in one state of the USA between November 2006 and September 2009. Overall, the most striking feature was the sharp rise in text messaging, while other methods of communication for teenagers kept a fairly similar level with minor fluctuations. […]
