Print Email Facebook Twitter From Curriculum To Career: Analysing The Contribution Of Delft University’s Robotics Msc Programme To The Career Path Of Its Alumni Title From Curriculum To Career: Analysing The Contribution Of Delft University’s Robotics Msc Programme To The Career Path Of Its Alumni Author Saunders-Smits, Gillian (TU Delft Robot Dynamics) Bossen, R.H. (TU Delft Education and Student Affairs) de Winter, J.C.F. (TU Delft Human-Robot Interaction) Department Education and Student Affairs Date 2023 Abstract The increasing global demand for robotics expertise led the Delft University of Technology to launch a two-year Master of Science programme in Robotics in 2020. The programme was designed to educate versatile robotics engineers capable of overseeing the entire process from conception of robotics systems to implementation. The curriculum integrates disciplines such as machine perception, artificial intelligence, robot planning and control, human-robot interaction, and ethics, and emphasises personal development through a course called Portfolio, which was later rebranded as Vision and Reflection. The effectiveness of the programme was evaluated by conducting a survey among the first cohort of students. The online survey, completed by 21 alumni, assessed the programme’s alignment with graduates’ career paths and their perceptions of the programme. Most respondents (81%) secured employment, with 69% in robotics, and all others had consciously chosen different fields. On average, graduates found jobs in under a month. Common job titles were Robotics Engineer and Software Engineer. However, graduates least appreciated the original Robot & Society and Portfolio courses. The recently rebranded Vision and Reflection course is expected to improve student engagement by focusing on meaningful reflection rather than documentation. Overall, the programme received positive feedback, with 88% of respondents saying it provided a comprehensive robotics education, and 94% stating they would choose it again. However, the evaluation was limited to the more successful half of the cohort, indicating the need to assess the experiences of the remaining graduates, who took over 2.5 years to complete their degrees. Subject Career pathsRoboticsPersonal LeadershipProfessional developmentTransferable skillsLearning in context (robotics domain) To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:a7b069e0-fdbf-4148-9b1a-1a6c18512908 DOI https://doi.org/10.21427/3VA6-M479 Page numbers 1150-1159 Event 51st Annual Conference of the European Society for Engineering Education (SEFI), 2023-09-11 → 2023-09-14, Dublin, Ireland Part of collection Institutional Repository Document type conference paper Rights © 2023 Gillian Saunders-Smits, R.H. Bossen, J.C.F. de Winter Files PDF From_Curriculum_To_Career ... lft_Un.pdf 1.25 MB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:a7b069e0-fdbf-4148-9b1a-1a6c18512908/datastream/OBJ/view