Graphs and Diagrams I Types of diagrams 1. What are diagrams good for? Which types of diagrams/charts do you know? 2. Tasks 2a), b), c), 3., 4. and 5c) based on Academic Vocabulary in Use, CUP 2009. a) Match the types of chart and their names. table flow chart pie chart line graph organigram bar chart histogram cross-section 1________ 2________ 3_________ 4________ 5________ line-graph---overview-two 6________ Organisation chart 7________ 8________ b) Check your answers in the following text. Diagrams are visual ways of presenting data concisely. They are often also called figures. In an academic article, they are usually labelled Fig. 1 (Figure 1), Fig. 2, etc. A pie chart is a circle divided into segments from the middle (like slices of a cake) to show how the total is divided up. A key or legend shows what each segment represents. A bar chart is a diagram in which different amounts are represented by thin vertical or horizontal bars which have the same width but vary in height or length. A histogram is a kind of bar chart but the bar width also varies to indicate different values. A table is a grid with columns and rows of numbers. Graphs are drawn by plotting points on them and then drawing a line to join adjacent points. A cross-section is something, or a model of something, cut across the middle so that you can see the inside. A cross-section of the earth’s crust, for example shows the different layers that make it up. A label gives the name of each part of the cross-section. Cross-section can also be used to mean a small group that is representative of all the different types within the total group (e.g. the survey looked at a cross-section of society). A flowchart is a diagram which indicates the stages of a process. A specific flowchart can be organization chart, or an organigram, which is a graphic representation of the structure of an organization showing the relationships of the positions or jobs within it. c) Which type of diagram would you use for presenting: · the different stages of a research project · the different layers of rock in the Grand Canyon · the populations of English native speakers in various countries · the number of undergraduates studying physics at various Czech universities in 2010 – 2017 3. Describe the following graph: Textové pole: a survey of 1,ooo teenagers Compare your description with the following text: The graph presents data relating to teenagers and pocket money. A random sample of 1,000 teenagers were surveyed and the average pocket money received at each age has been plotted on the graph. The x-axis or horizontal axis indicates age and the y-axis or vertical axis shows the amount of money received per week. The graph shows that 15-year-olds receive twice as much pocket money as 13-year-olds. From the graph we can see that the amount received reaches a peak at the age of 18 and then starts to decline. This decline can perhaps be explained by the fact that many teenagers start earning and stop receiving pocket money at the age of 18. 4. Look at the chart and complete the commentary with suitable words: The chart …………………………… the number of cars entering the downtown area of West City each day over an eight-year period (years 1 – 8). The totals are listed on the …………………………… axis, while the years are listed on the …………………………… axis. To the right of the graph we see the …………………………… . The number of cars …………………………… over the period. The total rose in the first few years and …………………………… a …………………………… in year 5, after which the numbers started to …………………………… . This can be …………………………… by the …………………………… that a new mass transit railway was opened in year 6. 5. Language focus a) Fill in the synonyms: to increase: to decrease: to stay the same: an increase: a decrease: b) Draw graphs illustrating the given speed/degree of change (some of them are synonymous): (Sales have fallen) rapidly/ quickly/ slowly/ steadily/ suddenly/ gradually/ swiftly/ gently/ substantially/ slightly/ dramatically / considerably/ significantly/ moderately/ vastly c) Change the sentences using words with the same meaning as the words in bold. · The different bits of the pie chart show the numbers of people. · She kept a record by marking the midday temperatures on a graph. · The two lines on the graph cross each other at point A. · Draw a line connecting the points that are next to each other. · The average family car in the UK goes down in value by 20% per year. This means its value has fallen by more than a half after just three years. · A typical piece of land will go up in value by 15% per year. · The number of this species went up from 22 to 273. d) Complete the words by adding vowels a, e, I , o, u (the task from M. Pavlovová): 6. Listen and draw a graph according to the speaker’s description: Based on https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N1uAImH4GwA https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bqf8m7xNvLg A boy is walking on a path in the woods on a fine spring day. He walks the one-kilometre path at a rate of 100 metres per minute all the way to the end of the path, then he sits and rests on a bench for another 10 minutes thinking about what to have for lunch. Once he’s got an idea he gets very excited and begins to run back the way he came at a rate of two hundred metres per minute, but after he gets halfway back he becomes tired and slows down to 50 metres per minute. Try to represent his progress on a graph. x axis always represents time, but y axis represents different variables, namely position, velocity, and acceleration. How would these graphs differ?