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IELTS Writing Task 1 #141


You should spend about 20 minutes on this task.

The pie charts below illustrate the


number of journal articles read per week
by all students, PhD students, and junior
lecturers at an Australian university.

Summarise the information by selecting


and reporting the main features, and
make comparisons where relevant.

Write at least 150 words.

IELTS Writing Guide

• The pie charts describe the proportions of


each group reading particular numbers of
articles each week.
• The numbers on each pie chart represent
percentages of people.
• The box at the bottom of the pie charts
shows the number of articles read each
week. There are three separate categories.
• For all students, the most noticeable
feature is that the majority read 1-5 articles.
For PhD students, the most noticeable
feature is that the majority read twelve or
more articles per week. For junior lecturers,
the most noticeable feature is that the
majority read 6-11 articles per week.
• In general, most students read between
one and five articles a week. Most PhD
students read more articles than other
students and junior lecturers. A tiny minority
of junior lecturers read only 1-5 articles per
week.

 Model answer
The three pie charts illustrate how many articles
from academic journals are read weekly by PhD
students and junior lecturers compared to other
students at an Australian university.

For example, the overwhelming majority of those


studying doctorates read at least twelve articles per
week in comparison with the average student. The
figures were 80 per cent and twelve per cent
respectively.

Furthermore, only five per cent of PhD level


students read between one and five articles,
whereas the average for all students in this
category is a hefty 67 per cent.

Meanwhile, for junior lecturers the pattern appears


to be slightly different. Most read six or more
articles per week (99 per cent), but out of this total
24 per cent read twelve or more, which is almost a
third of the corresponding figure for PhD level
students.

It is clear that those students who are researching


for a PhD read more articles than either junior
lecturers or other students.

(160 words)

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sbd − ⚑
S 2 years ago

The main purpose of pie charts is to provide


information on how many academic articles are
read weekly by doctoral students, junior lecturers,
and all students at a particular Australian
university. From a general perspective, while
doctoral students and junior lecturers read a large
number of articles, a signiAcant proportion of all
students do not read as much as they do.

As shown in the pie charts, 80% of doctoral


students read more than 12 articles per week, while
24% of lecturers read as much as they read.
However, only 12% of all students read more than
12 articles per week.

On the other hand, three-quarters of junior lecturers


read between 6 to 11 articles per week, while 22%
of all students and only 15% of doctoral students
read 6 to 11 essays per week.

As is presented in the Arst pie chart, 67% of all


students read between 1 and 5 articles per week,
while 5% of PhD students and only 1% of lecturers
read 1 to 5 articles per week.

To summarize, doctoral students read the most


articles weekly, lecturers second and all students
read the least weekly articles.

2 0 Reply • Share ›

disqus_SMIW8vrLB3 − ⚑
D 15 days ago

The pie charts depict the number of academic


reading materials read by undergraduates, post-
graduates and starting professors in a week at a
university in Australia.

Overall, it is evident that doctorate students read


the most numbers of not less than 12 academic
journals in a week. Followed by junior educators
with number of at least 6 to 11 journals being read,
then lastly the least number of journals being read
belong to undergrads.

Little less than three-quarter of the students


choose to read at least 1 to 5 academic articles
and 5% of which, belong to students taking up
doctorate. In contrast, junior lecturer are not fond
of reading low number of journals in a week which
can be accounted for just 1% in their total
proportion.

Reading 6 to 11 journals a week is highly popular


among junior lecturer as it include three-quarters of
their entire number. In contrast, 6 to 11 journals
appeal less to PhD students as they account for
only 5%.

Meanwhile, PhD students require to read more than


a dozen of journal articles than the rest of the
groups. This is followed by junior lecturers with a
Agure of almost a quarter (24%) and least frequent
for undergraduates with only half of the lecturer’s
percentage.

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Anas − ⚑
A 4 months ago

The pie charts provide information about the


number of weekly journal articles divided into 3
categories which are read by 3 different stages of
students all students, Ph.D. students, and junior
lecturers at an Australian university.

Overall, there are signiAcant differences in the


percentages of each type, all students tend to read
the lowest number of articles, in contrast, more
than 12 articles per week constitute the highest
percentage of Ph.D. students' reading preference.

The number of journal articles between 1-5


accounts for slightly above a third of the total
percentage in all students chart, despite this, it
shows very low percentages in both Ph.D. and
junior lecturers sections at 5% and 1% respectively,
while 6 to 11 articles per week were the most
suitable numbers for lecturers that comprise three-
quarters of the total proportion, whereas it is 21%
of all students readings and 15% in the Ph.D. Agure,
however, Ph.D. students have the biggest number
of articles, 80% of what read by them was above 12
articles per week.

0 0 Reply • Share ›

Kaan Uğur − ⚑
a year ago

The three pie charts demonstrate the number of


journal articles read weekly by all students, PhD
students, and junior lecturers at an Australian
university respectively.

Overall, the most noticeable points of pie charts is


PhD students read journal articles weekly more
than the other students. In addition, as shown in
the Arst pie chart, all students read the least
number of article weekly.

Meanwhile, 80% of PhD students read journal


articles 12+ weekly which has vast majority around
the other pie charts. 5% and 15% of students who
in the same group read articles 1 to 5 and 6 to 11
respectively.

In addition, junior lecturers have the second most


reader in this group. 75% of reader read 6 to 11
journal articles. 24% of them read 12+ articles
while 80% of PhD students read it.

As is presented in the Arst pie chart, 67% of


students read articles between 1 to 5. It is the least
number of was read articles in whole charts. Also,
12% and 21% read articles 6 to 11 and 12+
respectively. When 12% of students read articles
more than 12 PhD students and junior lecturers
read 80% and 24% respectively.

0 0 Reply • Share ›

Igor Guerreiro − ⚑
a year ago edited

The graphs demonstrate, the proportion of


academic articles PhDs, junior lectures and all
students have read, weekly, at an Australian
university.

Overall, what it is clear from the graphs is students


who are researching for a PhD position read more
than either junior lecturers or other students.
Additionally, junior lecturers also are prone to read
more articles compared to all students.

Focusing on the PhD Agures, the vast majority


(80%) of PhD students read 12+ academic journals
per week, which is 68% higher when compared to
the corresponding data for all students. In contrast,
only 5% of PhD students read up to Ave journals,
weekly, corresponding 4% and over two thirds less
when compared to junior lecturers (1%) and all
students (67%) respectively.

Turning to the junior lecturers, six to 11 articles are


accounted of the largest superiority of students
with three quarters, which is over 50% higher when
compared to all students. In addition, almost one
quarter of this students read 12+ academic
journals, which is 56% less when compared to the
corresponding Agure for PhD level students.

(179 words)

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khushbu patel − ⚑
K 2 years ago

the three pie charts divided by in terms of all


students,PhD students and junior lecturers to
re`ect proportion of Readers that how many
number of journal article read per weekat an
Australian university.

Just let me know that it is ok??

0 0 Reply • Share ›

Giorgio Daniele − ⚑
2 years ago edited

The three pie charts show how many journal


articles are read during a week at an Australian
university by all students, PhD students and junior
lecturers.
Overall, the majority of PhD student and junior
lecturers are more interested in reading journal
articles than all student, collectively.
According to the PhD chart, eight in ten students
read more than twelve articles and 15 percent read
from six to eleven articles weekly, while a junior
lecturer read from six up to twelve on average
articles a week.
At the opposite, the number of articles read
between one and Ave accounts for the largest
fraction among all student, while reading more than
6 articles is at 21 percent and reading more
than twelve is even more unpopular, at 12 percent.

0 0 Reply • Share ›

shantt semerjian − ⚑
S 2 years ago edited

The given pie chart illustrates how many Journal


articles were
read weekly by (PhD students, junior lecturers and
all student) at an Australian
university.

Overall, the vast majority of PhD students read


more than
twelve Journal articles per week, and junior
lecturers read between six and
eleven Journal articles. Meanwhile, all students
read less than Ave Journal
articles per week.

In regards of students who read over 12 Journal


articles per week, the majority of them are PhD
students at 80%. While only about the quarter of
junior lecturers read Journal articles
at 24%. And the remaining group at 12%.

Three quarters of junior lecturers read between six


and eleven
Journal articles per week. In comparison, “PhD
student” and “All students” read
15% and 21% respectively.

Almost Two thirds of “All students” read between


one and
Ave Journal articles per week. In comparison,
almost no PhD student reads less
than 6 Journal articles at only 1%. And the
remaining group at 5%.

0 0 Reply • Share ›

Sandra Kozłowska − ⚑
2 years ago

The three pie charts show the quantity of journal


articles read weekly by all students, PhD students
and junior lecturers from a particular Australian
university.

At Arst, it is clearly noticeable that the group who


reads the greatest number of journal articles each
week are PhD students. Eighty percent of them
read more than 12 articles weekly, whereas slightly
less than a quarter of junior lecturers and twelve
percent of all students read that many articles each
week.

In contrast, the graph shows that 24% of junior


lecturers read 6 to 11 articles each week while
twenty percent of all students and only less than a
Afth of PhD students read that quantity.

The interesting fact is, more than two-thirds of


other students read 1 to 5 of journal articles, as
opposed to PhD students and junior lectures
(barely Ave percent and 1% relatively).

Overall, it is easy to see that a PhD group of


students read the greatest amount of journal
articles.

0 0 Reply • Share ›

Karyna − ⚑
K 2 years ago

The pie charts provide information about the


amount of journal publications read by students as
a whole, those who are on their PhD and young
lecturers at one of the Australian universities each
week.
According to the information given most students
read between 1 and 5 journal articles a week
whereas PhD students mostly process 12 and more
articles and the greatest part of those who give
lectures read between 6 and 11 journal articles
each week.
While most students (67%) read 1 to 5 publications
a week, the same amount is studied by as many as
5% of those on PhD (studying doctorates) stage
and only by 1% of young lecturers. Moving further,
12 and more articles are processed by the
(overwhelming) majority of PhD students (80%)
each week comparing to just below a quarter of
junior lecturers and 12% of overall number of
students. Finally, exactly three quarters of those
who present lectures study between 6 and 11
journal publications weekly; at the same time
(meanwhile) this number of articles is read by just
over one Afth of all students and by only 15% of
PhD ones.

0 0 Reply • Share ›

Neeraj Kumar Singhal − ⚑


2 years ago

The pie chart demonstrate how many journal


articles are read by all students, PhD students and
junior lecturers weekly at a university in Australia.
Overall, it is evident that the maximum number of
journal articles are read by PhD students and the
least by all students group.
Focusing on students, a whopping 80 percent of
Phd students read more than 12 journal articles
weekly while only 12 percent of all students fall in
this category.Conversely, the percentage for 6 to 11
journal readers are not that different, with 15
percent of PhD and 21 percent of all students
reading them.
As for junior lecturers, three fourth of them read 6
to 11 journal articles per week ,and the rest read
over 12 articles.Furthermore only a negligible
percent of junior lecturers read 1 to 5 articles which
is in sharp contrast with two thirds of all students
readers' preferred bracket.

0 0 Reply • Share ›

Mert Kayali − ⚑
M 2 years ago

The pie chart illustrates the number of journal


articles are read per week by all students, PhD
students and junior lecturers.

For all students in Australian university, 67 % of


them read 1 to 5 articles per week and 33 percent
of these students read 6 or more articles in a
week.Slightly more than one Afth of these students
read 6 to 11 articles and remaining percentage
reads over 12 articles per week.

Furthermore, vast majority of PhD students read


more than 12 articles in a week, four Afth of these
students.There is only 5 percent who read less than
6 article in week among these PhD students.

The pie chart given for junior lecturers show that 3


quarter of junior lecturers read 6 to 11 article per
week and almost every other remaining lecturers
said they read 12+ articles in a single week, only 1
percent of total junior lecturers classiAed in 1 to 5
category.

It is fact that PhD students are leader about the


number of articles are readed by the students.

0 0 Reply • Share ›

Lyn Lixue − ⚑
3 years ago

162 words

The pie charts demonstrate how many journal


articles do PhD students, all students and junior
lecturers read in a week at Australian university.

Overall, PhD students read the most of journal


articles, second is the junior lecturers while all
students read the least.

For PhD students, 80% of them read at least 12


articles per week which is about 6 folds more than
all students, in comparison to roughly a quarter of
junior lecturers. Meanwhile, approximately 6 to 11
journal was read by 21% of all students which is 6%
higher than the Phd student; however, a large
fraction of junior lecturers at 75% read the articles
at this number weekly.

Furthermore, only 5% of PhD students read less


than 5 articles per week which is higher than the
junior lecturers by 4%. In contrast, a majority of all
students(67%) read between 1 to 5 journal articles
per week which represents why this group read the
least among the 3 groups.

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Rachid EL Azzab − ⚑
3 years ago

The three pie charts show the results of a survey


realized with an Australian university among three
groups of students: PhD students, junior lecturer,
and all students.

As shown, 80 % of the PhD students read above 12


books per week, while 5% do between 6 and 11 in
one week, the remnants 15% look through 1 to 6. In
contrast, the general students are less that consult
scientiAc books with 67 % of them read 1 to 6
books per week and just 12% read up to 12.

It can be seen that junior lecturer have a high rate


of students that read from 6 to 11 by week,
whereas 24% read plus 12 par week.

Overall, the PHD students read more journals per


week, followed by junior lecturer, while the other
students have the worst habits of reading journals.

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Paul Plate − ⚑
3 years ago

The graph shows the results of a study done at an


Australian University, which re`ects the quantity of
journals articles reviewed per week by different
groups of the university: students in general, PhD
students, and junior students.

The PhD study is the group that register the most


frequent reading habits, 80% of the them reviewing
more than 12 journals and only 5% of them reading
between 1 to 5 articles. On the contrary, 67% the
general students read from 1 to 5 articles per week,
only 12% of them reading more than 12 articles.

On the other hand, junior lecturers reading


costumes show a middle point between the habits
of the general and PhD students. 75% of the junior
lecturers review from 6 to 11 articles per week and
only 1% of them review less than 6 articles.

Finally, there is no doubt the PhD students is the


group that reads the most. Between the junior
lecturers and the general students, these lasts are
the ones who have the worst reading habits.

0 0 Reply • Share ›

chris wong − ⚑
C 3 years ago

The three pie charts below compare the percentage


breakdown of the number of journal articles read
per week by 3 types of students at an Australian
university, including all students, PhD students and
junior lecturers.

Generally, among all of the students, the proportion


of pupils who read 1 to 5 articles occupies the
greatest sector, which is a signiAcant 67%.
Following is the percentage of students reading 6-
11 articles every 7 days. However, there are only a
few students can read more than 12 journals.

The situation in the PhD students and junior


lecturers categories vary a lot from the
mainstream. For the PhD students, a majority of
80% can read over 12 articles a week and the Agure
for students who read less than 6 articles is very
small. Regarding the junior lecturers, 75% of them
read 6-11 articles. There is only an insigniAcant 1%
of lecturers reading 1-5 journals.

It can, therefore, be seen that PhD students and


junior lecturers have a more frequent habit of
reading journals than the majority.

0 0 Reply • Share ›

Nadia K. − ⚑
N 3 years ago

The three pie charts depicts the number of journal


read per week in an Australian university by
different group of students, which is, all students,
PhD students and junior lecturers.

In the Arst pie chart, we can see the 67 percent of


all students read 1-5 journals and 21% of them read
6-11 article journals. However, only 12 percent of all
students read more than 12 journal articles.
Whereas, in second pie chart, 80 percent of PhD
students read more than 12 journal articles and 15
percent read 6-11 journal articles. 5% of students
are those who read only 1-5 journal articles.
The third one suggests that one third of junior
lecturers read 6-11 journal article is and a quarter
reads more than 12 journal articles. Only 1% read 1-
5 article journals.
In conclusion, each group of students has a
different reading pattern. Maximum number of
journal articles are read by students who are
pursuing doctorate when compared to others
groups.

0 0 Reply • Share ›

Nadia K. − ⚑
N
> Nadia K.
3 years ago

is it correct?

1 0 Reply • Share ›

Ench Engeli − ⚑
3 years ago edited

The three pie charts show the percentile for the


number of articles from academic journals read
weekly by PhD students, junior lecturers and all
other students at Australian University.

It's pretty stunning to see majority of those


students pursuing the PhD program read more than
12 articles per week in comparison to all other
students. The Agures are 80 percent and 12,
respectively.

Moreover, only 5 percent of PhD students read


between 1 or 5 articles and 15 per cent read 6 to
11. In contrast, a large percentage of all other
students (67 %) did same amount of reading.

Meanwhile, the junior lecturers of 75 percentile


read 6 to 11 articles, 25 percentile read more than
12 and remarkably only 1 per cent read 5 or less.

It's indeed clear that students taking PhD program


did enormous of reading as part of their research
work comparing to either the junior lecturers or all
other students.

0 0 Reply • Share ›

Rahul dhull − ⚑
R
> Ench Engeli
3 years ago

Jai baba ki

0 1 Reply • Share ›

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