Career Outcomes
According to employers, the single most important credential for a college graduate entering the workforce is internship experience. Bennington has 90 years of experience offering required annual internships, landing students in over 100,000 jobs.
At Bennington, every student graduates with a resume of four work experiences, and most accumulate a resume of over eight. This repeat experience leads to satisfied grads: Bennington students graduate not just with jobs, but with confidence and clarity about their strengths, values, and ambitions in the world of work.
Bennington College Graduate Outcomes
Results represent data taken from the Spring 2024 Alumni Survey, the Class of 23 First Destination Survey, and student records.
of Bennington graduates are employed 2 to 5 years out from graduation.
Employed
of Bennington graduates completed at least four internships or research experiences.
Experienced
of recent graduates are engaged in their work or studies.
Prepared
Starting Salaries
On average, graduates make more than $46,000 a year within 6 months to a year from graduation and over $61,000 a year within 2 to 5 years after graduation.
What Graduates Say
"I was very confident because I had a lot of work experiences in the field considering my age and that I just graduated."
—Ioanna Katsara '20 Community Outreach Specialist, Healthcare and Rehabilitation Services of Southeastern Vermont
"I built a very strong network in my field that made my job search after graduation much easier."
—Nare Filopsyan ’17, Designer, BKSK Architects
"Field Work Term was an integral part of my time at Bennington. Each of my experiences confirmed for me that I am on the path I want to take."
—Katherine Yee ’17, Assistant Editor, Grove Atlantic
"Field Work Term is where my interest in communications for political organizations began."
—George Salvat ’17, Digital Strategist, DC Consulting Firm
"Field Work Term gave me the chance to do things I never would have tried on my own. It empowered me to explore my interests, and gave me the skills to reach out and make connections, and both of those things have been nothing short of life-changing."
—Gennelle Rankin ’15, PhD student, Neuroscience, Harvard University