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WRITING TASK 1You should spend about 20 minutes on this task.The table below shows the percentage of men and women and women who traveled to work by different means of transport in Sydney in 2001.Summaries the information by selecting and reporting the main features, and make comparisons where relevant.Write at least 150 words.The table shows five different means of transportation taken to work by people living in Sydney in 2001.As can be seen form the chart, buses were the most common way to travel to work by both genders in Sydney, although a slightly higher percentage of women than men chose this as their preferred form of transport (38% and 32% respectively). Cars were the second most popular, taken by almost an equal percentage of men and women (28% and 27%).Motorbike, on the other hand, was the least preferred means of transport for both genders. Only a small fraction of the population (5% for men and 2% for women) traveled to work on a motorcycle. Interestingly, about one third of citizens in Sydney got to their workplace without a motor vehicle. 18% of men and 16% of women rode a bicycle while 17% of both genders simply walked.Overall, citizens in Sydney made good use of alternative methods of transport for going to work but there was a heavy dependence on bused and cars.-174 wordsWRITIN TASK 1You should spend about 20 minutes on this task.The table gives information about the female workforce and female managers in five countries.Summarise the information by selecting and reporting the main features and make comparisons where relevant. Write at least 150 words.The table lists the percentage of the total workforce and the percentage of managers who are women in five countries.The United States has a roughly gender- balanced workforce: women make up about half the country’s working population (46). Women in Australia and Japan have similar share of the country’s labor force (42% and 41% respectively). Next comes Sri Lanka with 37% of all workers being women. Finally, Egypt is where the most striking gender difference is found: there is only one woman for every four men in the workplace.Turing to employment at management levels, the United States and Australia have a similar percentage of managers who are women (43% and 41% respectively), which is only slightly lower than the corresponding percentage of women in the overall workforce. However, managerial positions in the other three countries are predominately occupied by men, as women constitute only 12% of all managers in both Egypt and Japan, and only 9% in Sri Lanka.To sum up, Australia and the US have the most balance gender ratio throughout the workplace while gender difference is the greatest at management levels in Sri Lanka.-189 wordsWRITIN TASK 1You should spend about 20 minutes on this task.The table below summaries some data collected by a college bookshop for the month of Feb. 1999.Summarise the information by selecting and reporting the main features and make comparisons where relevant.Write at least 150 words.From the table, we can see that the sales figures of fiction books, non-fiction books, and magazines in a college bookshop for February 1999. The figures are divided into two groups: sales to non-book club members and to book club members.The non-book club member figures comprise sales to college staff, college students, and members of the public. College staff bought 333 magazines, 44 fiction and 29 non-fiction books. College students bought 1249 magazines, 194 non-fiction and 31fiction books. More magazines were sold to college students than to any other group of customers. Although no fiction books were sold to members of the public, they purchased 122 non-fiction books and 82 magazines.Book club member bought more fiction (76) and non- fiction books (942) than other customers. On the other hand, magazines sales to club members (33) were the fewest. The total number of publications sold for the month was 3135 (1474 to college students, 406 to staff, 204 to the public, and 1051 to book club members). Of this figure, 151 items were fiction books and 1287 were non-fiction. Therefore, magazines accounted for the greatest number of sales.-189 wordsThe chart shows the number of hour of leisure enjoyed by men and women in a typical week in 1998- 1999, according to gender and employment status. Among those employed full-time, men on average had fifty hours of leisure, whereas women had approximately thirty-seven hour. There were no figures given for forty hours of leisure time, only slightly more than women full-time employment, perhaps reflecting their work in the home.In the unemployed and retired categories, leisure time showed an increase for both sexes, as might have been expected. Here too, men enjoyed more leisure time- over eight hours, compared with seventy hours for women, perhaps once again reflecting the fact that women spend more time working in the home than men.Lastly, housewives’enjoyed approximately fifty-four hours of leisure on average. There were no figures given for househusbands.Overall, the chart demonstrates that in the categories for which statistics on male leisure time were available, men enjoyed at least ten hours of extra leisure time.-166 words。