Approximately 70% of graduates from Computer and Information Science go on to graduate school, and the remaining 30% choose to work. It is often the case, even for those that initially had a vague expectation they would enter the workforce after graduation, that they find research and study at University to be interesting, or they feel a need for more-advanced special skills, so they choose to advance to graduate school for the Master course. Course instructors also take responsibility and support job hunting, and of course, our employment rate is 100%.
Options for students completing the Master Course. The Graduate School Master Course is two years, enabling students to polish the diversity of information-science knowledge gained in their four-years of university in advanced practical research, and cultivating information specialists. The technical skills learned and research accomplished in graduate school are evaluated very highly when searching for employment. Graduates are utilized as highly skilled specialists employed in a variety of industries and types of work. These have included doing R&D on new devices in industries such as appliances or precision instruments, realizing their own dreams in communications, broadcasting or entertainment industries, or proposing and building information systems as an IT specialist.