Ask the seniors who graduated from Surveying and Mapping Engineering to give some advice.

Surveying and mapping engineering is generally divided into geodesy and surveying engineering, photogrammetry and remote sensing, cartography and geographic information engineering, cartography and geographic information system, surveying and mapping science and technology, measurement and control technology and instruments.

In other words, master geodetic survey, engineering survey, marine survey, mine survey, cadastral survey technology, etc.

After graduation, you can work in land departments, planning departments, engineering units (including buildings, bridges, roads and other units), or you can work in the Bureau of Surveying and Mapping, which is divided into the Institute of Geographic Information Industry, the Institute of Aerial Remote Sensing and the Institute of Geodesy for surveying or remote sensing mapping.

There are many employment opportunities.

I graduated from Surveying and Mapping Engineering. I have done two years of geodesy, one year of GPS technical support and one year of surveying and mapping instrument sales. Now it's back to engineering survey. My salary is less than 4 thousand, and my classmates are now around 6 thousand-8 thousand