The chart below shows the percentage of male and female teachers in six different types of educational setting in the UK in 2010.
Summarise the information by selecting and reporting the main features, and make comparisons where relevant.
The bar chart represents the gender distribution of teachers teaching six distinct types of education in England in 2010.
It is noticeable that, in two of six levels, primary and pre-school, female teachers are much further outnumbered. However, in upper grades, there were more male teachers than female.
According to the given chart, there was a substantial gap between male and female lecturers at two early education levels. There were respectively 98% and 92% female teachers teaching in nursery and primary school. In the secondary level, the ratio of female teachers (about 52%) were slightly higher than male teachers (about 46%), in which women teachers number still dominated. In the case of college, there was an equal number from both genders. Males won in private training institutes by over 50%. There was a sharp gap in universities where the number of male teachers outnumbered female teachers, respectively 70% against 30%.
- The chart below shows the percentage of male and female teachers in six different types of educational setting in the UK in 2010 Summarise the information by selecting and reporting the main features and make comparisons where relevant
- Women and men are commonly seen as having different strengths and weaknesses Is it right to exclude males or females from certain professions because of their gender 78
- The Chart Below Shows The Percentage Of Male And Female Teachers In Six Different Types Of Educational Setting In The UK In 2010 80