## Pie Chart: Majors of Graduates Surveyed
### Overview
The image presents a pie chart illustrating the distribution of graduates across various majors in a survey. The survey involved 200 graduates and their loan payment status. The pie chart shows the proportion of graduates belonging to each major.
### Components/Axes
* **Title:** Majors
* **Legend:** Located on the right side of the pie chart.
* Blue: Arts
* Red: Business
* Green: Education
* Orange: Engineering
* Yellow: Kinesiology
* Teal: Law
* Pink: Medicine
* Purple: Science
* **Pie Chart Slices:** Each slice represents a major, with the size of the slice proportional to the number of graduates in that major. The number of graduates is displayed on each slice.
### Detailed Analysis
The pie chart shows the following distribution of graduates across majors:
* **Arts (Blue):** 22 graduates
* **Business (Red):** 19 graduates
* **Education (Green):** 20 graduates
* **Engineering (Orange):** 11 graduates
* **Kinesiology (Yellow):** 5 graduates
* **Law (Teal):** 9 graduates
* **Medicine (Pink):** 5 graduates
* **Science (Purple):** 9 graduates
### Key Observations
* Arts has the highest number of graduates (22), representing the largest slice of the pie.
* Kinesiology and Medicine have the lowest number of graduates (5 each), representing the smallest slices.
* Business and Education have a significant representation with 19 and 20 graduates respectively.
* Engineering and Science have a moderate representation with 11 and 9 graduates respectively.
* Law has a moderate representation with 9 graduates.
### Interpretation
The pie chart provides a clear visual representation of the distribution of graduates across different majors in the survey. The data suggests that Arts, Business, and Education are the most popular majors among the surveyed graduates, while Kinesiology and Medicine are the least popular. The distribution could reflect various factors such as career opportunities, student interests, or academic program sizes. The survey aims to explore the relationship between these majors and the loan payment status of the graduates.