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LinkedIn Just Launched A Bunch Of New Tools To Help Students Figure Out Where To Go To College

Stanford University college graduation
Stanford University college graduation

Flickr/saket_vora

LinkedIn wants to help the next generation of happy college graduates

With college application season nearly upon us, LinkedIn just launched a bunch of new tools to help prospective students figure out where they should go to college and what they should study to get their dream jobs. 

Here are some of the new resources:

Decision Boards give students a simple way to organize and share their thought process

The goal of Decision Boards is to give prospective students a place to organize their favorite potential school choices, with tools to help them “work the problem” from start to decision. They can add schools they’re considering, with notes about why. They can then share their boards with parents and advisors, who can add their own notes.

Boards will also allow students to connect with others who are interested in the same universities, so they can potentially connect and discuss their thoughts. 

LinkedIn College
LinkedIn College

LinkedIn

University Outcome Rankings let students filter schools based on their dream jobs, by seeing which have the most alumni in that field

LinkedIn analyzed millions of alumni profiles to find out how thousands of schools stack up across a variety of careers. Students can search by a variety of professions — like designer, investment banker, software developer, media professional, or marketer — to see which schools rank highest, based on how successful their recent graduates have been at landing good jobs. LinkedIn will be launching more categories and countries to search over time. 

LinkedIn College
LinkedIn College

LinkedIn

University Finder lets students be even more specific about where they want to end up

Using interactive graphs, students can explore a possible career outcome by entering what they want to study, where they want to work, and where they eventually want to live.  For example, one could enter: “I’d like to study engineering, then work at Google and live in the SF Bay Area” and the school results would update accordingly.

LinkedIn College
LinkedIn College

LinkedIn

Field Of Study Explorer helps students realize that each major can lead to a wide variety of career outcomes

Getting a degree in fine arts doesn’t mean you won’t get a job. Field Of Study Explorer shows students how many LinkedIn members studied any given major at their university, and what they ended up doing and where. 

LinkedIn
LinkedIn

LinkedIn

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