Given the needs of the industry, graduates with aBUT in PhysicalBUT or a Professional Bachelor’s Degree in “Sensors, Instrumentation, and Metrology” have no trouble finding employment.
Although the DUT is a vocational degree, this fairly broad-based program opens up many opportunities for further study, ranging from professional bachelor’s degrees and academic bachelor’s degrees to engineering schools—whether through work-study programs or traditional full-time programs—depending on the student’s academic performance:
General bachelor's degrees leading directly to the third year
Professional degrees
Entry into the workforce
The multidisciplinary training provided to Advanced Technicians with aBUT PhysicalBUT or to Assistant Engineers with a Professional Bachelor’s Degree in “Sensors, Instrumentation, and Metrology” enables graduates to find employment in virtually all industrial sectors and types of companies. Their ability to adapt and specialize is highly valued. The department receives an average of 80 job offers for technicians each year.
Types of businesses:
Public research laboratories (CNRS, CEA, CENT, etc.), large corporations (EDF, Schneider, STMicroelectronics, etc.), small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs)
Business sectors
Automotive, Aerospace, Mechanical Engineering, Telecommunications, Electronics, Optics, Industrial Microcomputing, Optoelectronics, Materials, Chemistry and Related Fields, Biomedical, Agri-Food, Environment…
Published on May 29, 2017 Updated on September 22, 2022
Share the linkCopyCopiedClose modal windowShare this page's URLI recommend this page:Available at this address:The page will then be accessible from your "My Favorites" menu.Stop the videoPlay the videoMutePlay audioChat: Have a question?Robo Fabrica ChatbotMatomo traffic statisticsX (formerly Twitter)