Tufts vs Wesleyan for career outcomes: which tends to have stronger job and grad school results after graduation?

I’m trying to compare Tufts and Wesleyan mainly based on what happens after college, not just campus vibe or academics. I know both are well-regarded, but I’m wondering which one tends to have stronger career outcomes overall.

I’m interested in things like internships, graduate school placement, and getting a first job after graduation.
3 days ago
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Sundial Team
3 days ago
For career outcomes, Tufts usually has the clearer edge for students who want a more structured path into internships, professional recruiting, and early-career jobs, especially in fields like consulting, finance, biotech, engineering, international relations, and public policy. Its location near Boston matters a lot here, because students have easier access to semester-time internships, hospital and research roles, and alumni connections across a large metro area.

Wesleyan can produce excellent outcomes too, but it tends to fit students who are more self-directed, entrepreneurial, or headed toward creative, academic, nonprofit, media, or research-oriented paths. Wesleyan has a very loyal alumni network and a strong reputation in certain circles, especially film, the arts, writing, academia, and some social-impact work. Students there often do very well, but the path can feel less built around formal recruiting and more dependent on initiative, relationships, and shaping your own opportunities.

For internships during the school year, Tufts has an advantage because being in the Boston area makes part-time opportunities more accessible. That can translate into a stronger resume by senior year and sometimes a smoother jump into a first job. Wesleyan students absolutely get internships too, especially in summers, but the campus setting is less tied to a major job market in the same immediate way.

For grad school placement, both schools send many students on to strong programs, and neither has a weak reputation. Tufts may stand out more for students targeting medicine, public health, law, engineering-adjacent programs, or international affairs, while Wesleyan often shines for PhD-bound students, humanities and social science scholarship, and arts-related graduate study.

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