Welcome to your Interpreting Information from Charts, Tables, and Graphs Decision Making (UCAT)
1.
"A line graph shows the number of COVID-19 tests conducted weekly: Week 1: 500, Week 2: 600, Week 3: 550, Week 4: 700." In which week did testing increase the most compared to the previous week?
2.
"A graph shows sales of 3 medications over 3 months: Med A (10, 12, 15), Med B (8, 9, 12), Med C (6, 10, 11)." Which medication had the greatest percentage increase from month 1 to month 3?
4.
"A graph tracks daily hospital bed occupancy: Mon 120, Tue 130, Wed 125, Thu 135, Fri 140." On which day did occupancy increase the least compared to the previous day?
5.
"A pie chart shows causes of hospital admissions: Infection 40%, Injury 25%, Chronic Disease 20%, Other 15%." If 400 patients were admitted, how many were due to injury?
6.
"A table lists test scores for 4 students: Alice: 85, 90, 88; Bob: 78, 85, 82; Charlie: 92, 95, 94; Dana: 88, 90, 89." Who had the most consistent performance?
7.
"A bar chart shows the number of patients visiting three clinics over four months: Clinic A (Jan: 120, Feb: 150, Mar: 130, Apr: 140), Clinic B (Jan: 100, Feb: 120, Mar: 110, Apr: 130), Clinic C (Jan: 80, Feb: 90, Mar: 100, Apr: 120)." Which clinic had the largest overall increase from January to April?
8.
"A chart shows hours spent studying per week: Week 1: 5, Week 2: 8, Week 3: 6, Week 4: 7." Which week’s study time was closest to the average over the 4 weeks?
9.
"A table lists average wait times (minutes) for 3 doctors: Dr. X: 15, 18, 20; Dr. Y: 12, 14, 16; Dr. Z: 10, 12, 15." Which doctor had the smallest increase in average wait time over the period?
10.
"A bar chart shows vaccine uptake: Age 0–18: 60%, 19–35: 70%, 36–50: 65%, 51–70: 75%." Which age group shows the lowest uptake?