What are George Mason University's career outcomes by major?

I'm trying to compare majors at George Mason and see how they connect to jobs after graduation. I know the career path can be different depending on the major, so I want a clearer sense of which programs tend to lead to specific types of careers.

I'm mainly looking for a general overview of career outcomes by major, not just overall school statistics.
4 hours ago
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Sundial Team
4 hours ago
George Mason’s career outcomes vary a lot by major, but some patterns are especially clear. Its strongest direct-to-job pipelines tend to be in computer science, engineering, cybersecurity, nursing, accounting, education, and business analytics, helped by Mason’s location near Washington, DC and Northern Virginia. Majors tied to government, policy, international affairs, economics, criminology, and public health also often connect well to employers in federal agencies, contractors, nonprofits, and regional health systems.

For technology majors, computer science, information technology, data analytics engineering, and cybersecurity usually lead to software development, systems administration, cloud, data, and security roles. Mason has a particularly strong reputation in cybersecurity and benefits from being close to defense and intelligence employers, which matters for students interested in cleared or government-adjacent work.

Engineering majors such as mechanical, electrical, civil, and systems engineering often move into design, testing, manufacturing, consulting, infrastructure, and defense-related roles. Nursing and other health-related majors generally have some of the clearest professional outcomes, with graduates entering hospital, clinic, community health, and related care settings soon after graduation.

Business majors can have very different outcomes depending on concentration. Accounting usually maps most directly to staff accountant, audit, tax, and advisory roles, while finance can lead to corporate finance, banking, analysis, and government finance positions. Marketing often leads to digital marketing, communications, branding, or sales roles, and business analytics is one of the stronger options for students who want a more technical business path.

For social sciences and public-service fields, government and international politics, public administration, economics, sociology, psychology, and criminology often feed into policy analysis, research support, case management, consulting, law-related paths, and federal or nonprofit work. At Mason, these majors are helped by internship access in DC, but some are more employer-ready with graduate study or targeted experience than with the major alone.

Humanities and arts majors such as English, history, communication, film, theater, and visual art can still have solid outcomes, but the path is usually broader rather than tied to one job title. Common directions include writing, editing, media production, communications, education, arts administration, UX content work, and public-sector communications, especially when students build internships, portfolios, or technical skills alongside the major.

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