Q- The first chart below gives information about the money spent by British parents on their children’s sports between 2008 and 2014. The second chart shows the number of children who participated in three sports in Britain over the same time period. Summarise the information by selecting and reporting the main features and make comparisons where relevant. Write at least 150 words.
Answer- A rendered line chart shows how much money parents in Britain spent on their children’s sporting activities over a period of 7 years from 2008 to 2014 as well as the percentage of young people who participated in those three activities.
Overall, it is clear that only a tiny percentage of youths participated in the initiative’s athletics during the whole time period, while the final year had the highest percentage of expenditures.
From the first chart, it is evident that the average monthly spending on juvenile sports activities was around 20 pounds in the first year and 25 pounds in the second year, but that it peaked at almost 32 million pounds in the previous year.
As observed from the second chart, when it comes to the number of sports participants in 2008, there were almost 1 million children taking part in athletics which gradually rose to a figure of nearly 5 million by 2014. Swimming, on the other hand, showed a steady rising pattern almost doubling in 2014 from nearly 2 million participants to close to 4 million. Conversely, football remained the most popular sport with its numbers exceeding the other two sports. The numbers, however, displayed a meagre rise. With the highest numbers recorded overall in 2008 (nearly 8 million), it stayed the highest in 2014 with participants reaching approximately 8.5 million.
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