etween 1991 and 2001 (?), and the line chart shows the government spending per student during the same period. The pie chart shows the percentage of students of 3 different family backgrounds, namely middle income class (62%), high income family class (30%) and low income family class ( 8%).
My
essay went like the following:
The three graphs show the changes of number of students and government spending on each student in UK between 1991 and 2001, and proportions of classes of family income from which the students were from in the year 2001. There was an increase to the number of students from 1 million (1991) to 6 million (2001), whereas there was a decrease in government spending per student from 6000 pounds (1991) to a little more than 2000 pounds (2001).
There was a steady increase of number of students from 1991 till 1999 (?), when the number levelled off at around 6 million. The government spending, on the other hand experienced a steady fall within this ten year period from.
It is also (important connector to me, added before submission) interesting to see the different sources of students whose household revenues are different. The majority (62%) of students were from middle class income families, while about one third (30%) came from high income families and 8% of students account for the low income families.
Task II
Many products, including some daily commodities are produced at low cost in other countries and transported into this country.
Do the advantages outweigh the disadvantages?
My
essay was like the following:
“No garden is without weeds”. (Intentionally quoted for better first impression.) Without exception, the discussion as to whether factories and plants ought to be established to produce or manufacture products or equipments, including daily necessities, in other countries is a heated one in Canada. As far as I am concerned, I hold the opinion that these factories or plants ought to be built. And I present my reasons as follows.
The main reason is the price or cost. People tend to be swayed by prices of products. Never will you see a customer who is willing to pay a higher price for a product when he/she can get a practically identical product at a lower price. Never will you find a client who retains a professional, for instance, a printer, to print his/her business cards when he/she can have them done the say way at another printer’s for less. (intentionally written here after reading the examiner’s comments on a band 8 composition in the specimen booklet for the purpose of gaining extras from the hands of the examiner.) Moreover, people tend to compare prices before they decide to purchase anything. And that is the best illustration of the phrase of “shopping around”. In other words, low cost creates the need of building factories in the developing or under-developed countries, such as China, Viet Nam, Thailand and so on so forth.
Another reason is that by introducing technologies to the developing or underdeveloped countries, Canada is helping boost the local economies. To look at it from another perspective, Canada is fulfilling its international commitment of helping relatively poor countries.
Last but not the least, setting up factories or plants in these countries promotes the world exchange, first at the commercial level, then at the cultural level, and no on. People are brought closer because of these exchanges. And that helps to u
本论文由英语论文网提供整理,提供论文代写,英语论文代写,代写论文,代写英语论文,代写留学生论文,代写英文论文,留学生论文代写相关核心关键词搜索。