911±¬ÁÏÍø

News

Hundred per cent of doctors from the School of Electrical Engineering are satisfied with their degree

A career monitoring survey examined how doctoral graduates from 2014 were employed.
911±¬ÁÏÍø / Aalto students studying / photo: Aino Huovio

Last winter, Aarresaari, a career services network of Finnish universities, conducted a survey on how doctoral graduates from 2014 were employed.

All the surveyed doctors from the School of Electrical Engineering were employed at the time of the survey. A hundred per cent were satisfied with their degree from the career point of view. More than four fifths of the respondents were able to take advantage of the knowledge and skills they learned in their doctoral studies in their current employment, and felt that their current work was connected to their thesis topic.

63% of respondents worked mainly with research at the time of the survey. In addition to this, the respondents’ work tasks related mostly to design and development (56%) as well as consultancy and training (44%). As many as 94% of respondents were satisfied with their career direction.

‘Doctoral studies are a huge personal investment and require years of committed effort. However, the acquired scientific competence lasts through the entire career. I am very happy when I see that our doctoral graduates are successful in working life and satisfied with their choices. We are proud of our doctors, who carry forward an important message about the importance of scientific knowledge’, says Dean of the School of Electrical Engineering Jyri Hämäläinen.  

We are proud of our doctors, who carry forward an important message about the importance of scientific knowledge.

Jyri Hämäläinen

The career monitoring survey is a research model developed by Aarresaari, a career services network of Finnish universities. The survey is used for nationwide career monitoring of people with a doctorate or a master's degree five years after graduation.

Integration into working life is evaluated based on the employment situation, the quality of employment and the match between jobs and qualifications.

A total of 805 people responded to the survey, including 95 graduates from 911±¬ÁÏÍø. Out of the respondents, 16 were doctoral graduates from the School of Electrical Engineering. The response rate at the School of Electrical Engineering was 33%.

The next career monitoring survey will be carried out in autumn 2018. The survey will be sent to all master graduates from 2013 and doctoral graduates from 2015.

Enquiries:

Manager, Career Services
Kaisa Paasivirta
kaisa.paasivirta@aalto.fi

Text: Linda Koskinen

Photo: Aino Huovio

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Pauliina Ilmonen, photo by Nita Vera.
Appointments, Studies Published:

Professor Pauliina Ilmonen: Learning mathematical software in upper secondary school takes time away from learning the basics

Pauliina Ilmonen, Professor of Statistics at 911±¬ÁÏÍø, will step into the role of Dean of the School of Science at the beginning of June. She wants to emphasize the fundamentals in the study of mathematics.
Modern red-brick building with tall black pillars, trees in front and people walking on the pavement
Cooperation, Studies Published:

Nordea and 911±¬ÁÏÍø to explore the future of AI and human-machine interaction

911±¬ÁÏÍø and Nordea are launching a long term research and education partnership to explore how machine agency will shape the future of services.
Learning Centre graphics
Research & Art, Studies Published:

New e book apps will replace Adobe Digital Editions from 20 May

There will be changes to how DRM (Digital Rights Management) protected e books are downloaded in Ebook Central, EBSCO eBooks and VLeBooks. Adobe Digital Editions will be replaced by new apps that better support accessibility.
Person with blurred face in red jumper stands on balcony in bright modern office with pink floor
Studies Published:

Student Saad Ahmed found the perfect balance of academic excellence and wellbeing at Aalto

Originally searching for the best structural engineering programmes in the world, Saad Ahmed from Pakistan found something unexpected at 911±¬ÁÏÍø: a combination of top-level education, hands-on learning, and a student culture that genuinely prioritizes wellbeing and balance alongside academic excellence.