As global economies continue to rapidly evolve, the College of Integrative Studies will be a place of interdisciplinary learning.

Students will learn to assemble knowledge from domains previously unconnected to attend to the challenges of the day.

Beyond integrating learning across disciplines, our students will benefit from combining lessons from the classroom with robust industry and real-world engagement.  

Here are some career roles that our graduates could take on, and some of the industries that our graduates could get a headstart in:

Potential Career Paths

Corporate Sustainability
Management Consultancy
Investment Analyst
Data Science
Digital Marketing
Biotechnology
Legal or Regulatory Consultancy and Advisory Work
Government and Public Service
Research Associate
Social Enterprise

Hear From Our Partners

Fang Eu-Lin
Fang Eu-Lin

Sustainability and Climate Change Practice Leader, PwC Singapore

There is no one size fits all for Passion. The Bachelor for Integrative Studies allows you to understand what motivates you, and offers a design for your education that aligns. We believe that this will allow you to create impact not only for yourself, but for society and business.

Edmund Lin
Edmund Lin

Chairman of Southeast Asia, Bain & Co.

In the fast-changing world, employers are looking for three key things in prospects - thoughtful, analytical problem solvers who aren't afraid of tackling difficult issues, strong communicators, and great team players. I believe CIS academic programmes would naturally drive its students to develop soft and hard skills related to these three criteria.

Hian Goh
Hian Goh

Founder & General Partner, Openspace Ventures

Today, it's critical to think ahead for the future; the only way to do it is to be inter-disciplinary. We must embrace orthogonal thinking, stay curious, and learn continuously. With the advent of artificial intelligence, being one step ahead of machines is more important than ever. That's why CIS integrative and transformative education is here to plug those gaps.