After obtaining your Bachelor's degree in Technical Computer Science (TCS), you can specialise further by following a master's programme. You can take a master's programme at the University of Twente, at another Dutch university or at a university abroad. Some of our bachelor's graduates work directly on the job market or start their own company.
Further studies: Master's in Computer Science
Many TCS alumni pursue our two-year, English-taught Master’s in Computer Science, which is the ideal follow-up to the Bachelor’s. It offers four specialisations:
Other Master’s
With your Bachelor’s degree, you are also directly admissible to other master’s, such as Embedded Systems, or Interaction Technology. With your Bachelor’s in TCS, you can enter most engineering & technology master’s, provided you first complete a pre-master’s. This also applies to master’s at other (inter) national universities.
A master’s in social sciences, such as Psychology, Philosophy, or Public Administration, is also possible. In most cases, you will have to take a tailored pre-master’s first.
Some students combine the Master’s Technical Computer Science with our Dutch-taught Science Education and Communication, which allows you to work in education, among other things.
Finding a job after the Master’s Technical Computer Science
After this programme, you will be trained to apply and understand information technology. There is huge demand in many different sectors for professionals who are eager to use technology for solving problems, and who are capable of organising solutions and putting them in the right context. If you want to start working with your additional master's, you will find plenty of job opportunities, even right here in Twente, the fastest growing industrial region in the Netherlands. Most graduates find a job within three months of completing their master’s. As an expert in a young branch of science, you will then be free to choose your place in a vast field.
- International business
Some of our graduates work at companies you’ve probably heard of, and whose systems you may often use. They develop new systems and services at companies like Google, Spotify, Facebook and Booking.com. - Financial sector
There is a growing demand for technical computer scientists in the banking and financial sector. You can work on a wide range of components in this field: from software development and algorithms to interactivity and security. - Energy companies
At an energy company, you might work on designing smart energy meters for monitoring the energy consumption of household appliances – or smart devices that can match energy demand and supply, or decide for themselves whether to opt for ‘normal’ energy or environment-friendly electricity. - ICT companies and consultancy firms
At many companies you can develop specific software systems to improve automation, for example, special software for booking airline tickets. As a technical computer scientist, you can handle many projects like that, saving your company a lot of costs. - Universities and research institutes
You can also build a career as a researcher, for example, at a university, a research institute or on the Research & Development department of a company. - Hospitals and the medical world
The University of Twente has a chair in Neuro Imaging. Here you can do research into medical databases. This research is aimed at organising the treatment of patients in such a way as to minimize patient suffering by combining existing data. If you choose this option, you will work closely with hospitals and surgeons.
Start your own company
You can also start your own business with a solution that you have developed. One of our strengths is applying knowledge to meaningfully influence society. Together with our students, we like to work with the innovation specialists from Novel-T, who like to tap into promising innovative business cases.
Examples of spin-offs that have come out of this programme include Thuisbezorgd.nl, an online platform that allows consumers to have restaurant meals delivered to their homes, Booking.com, one of the world’s largest e-commerce companies for trips and No Wires Needed, a manufacturer of wireless computer networks that since its founding has been acquired by another company.