The chart illustrates UK graduate and postgraduate students who did jobs such as part time work, voluntary work, further subject, unemployment, after finished they University studies in 2008.
The presented bar charts depict the subsequent pathways taken by UK graduate and postgraduate students in the year 2008, excluding those who embarked on full-time work.
The bar charts illustrate what graduate and postgraduate students have done after finishing collage in 2008 in England also, that these students did not go into a full-time jobs.
The bar charts illustrate that the number of pupils’ UK who got master and PhD degree worked part-time, voluntary work, further study or unemployment in 2008.
The bar charts provide information about the jobs of graduate and postgraduate students who did not have full-time work after leaving college in 2008 in the United Kingdom.
The charts illustrate 4 different future paths that graduate and postgraduate admission in the UK took in 2008. Overall, further study is the most popular choice for enlistment while voluntary work is the least. The number of graduates is much higher tha
The bar chart supplied illustrates the destination of UK graduates and postgraduates students after leaving college excluding getting a full-time job in 2008.
A glance at the two charts provided reveals what did UK graduate and postgraduate students who they did not go to full-time job did after leaving college in 2008.
The bar charts give information about graduates and postgraduates in Britain who did not work full-time in terms of what they did after finishing university in the year 2008.
The information presented in the bar graphs pertains to students in the United Kingdom who completed their graduate and postgraduate degrees in 2008 but did not immediately begin working full-time jobs.
The assigned bar graphs illustrate the comparison of students of UK graduates and postgraduates excluding full-time work in 2008. A cursory glance at the chart is enough to make it clear that the range of individuals continuing their further education was maximum in the given time period.
The assigned bar graphs illustrate the comparison of students of UK graduates and postgraduates excluding full-time work in 2008. A cursory glance at the chart is enough to make it clear that the range of individuals continuing their further education was maximum in the given time period.
The assigned bar graphs illustrate the comparison of students of UK graduates and postgraduates excluding full-time work in 2008. A cursory glance at the chart is enough to make it clear that the range of individuals continuing their post-education was ma