Find Affordable College Courses

What Do You Want to Study?

Software Engineering at Saint Louis University

Software Engineering at Saint Louis University

If you plan to study software engineering, take a look at what Saint Louis University has to offer and decide if the program is a good match for you. Get started with the following essential facts.

SLU is located in Saint Louis, Missouri and has a total student population of 12,229.

Want to know more about the career opportunities in this field? Check out the Careers in Software Engineering section at the bottom of this page.

SLU Software Engineering Degrees Available

  • Master’s Degree in Computer Software Engineering

SLU Software Engineering Rankings

Computer Software Engineering Student Demographics at SLU

Take a look at the following statistics related to the make-up of the computer software engineering majors at Saint Louis University.

SLU Software Engineering Master’s Program

17% Racial-Ethnic Minorities*
For the most recent academic year available, 100% of computer software engineering master's degrees went to men and 0% went to women.

undefined

The following table and chart show the race/ethnicity for students who recently graduated from Saint Louis University with a master's in computer software engineering.

undefined
Race/Ethnicity Number of Students
Asian 0
Black or African American 0
Hispanic or Latino 1
White 0
International Students 5
Other Races/Ethnicities 0

Careers That Computer Software Engineering Grads May Go Into

A degree in computer software engineering can lead to the following careers. Since job numbers and average salaries can vary by geographic location, we have only included the numbers for MO, the home state for Saint Louis University.

Occupation Jobs in MO Average Salary in MO
Software Applications Developers 15,380 $93,880
Systems Software Developers 6,440 $94,140
Architectural and Engineering Managers 2,740 $138,520
Engineering Professors 520 $106,680

References

*The racial-ethnic minorities count is calculated by taking the total number of students and subtracting white students, international students, and students whose race/ethnicity was unknown. This number is then divided by the total number of students at the school to obtain the racial-ethnic minorities percentage.

More about our data sources and methodologies.

Find Schools Near You

Our free school finder matches students with accredited colleges across the U.S.