Filters

Filters

  • Masters
  • Master degree
  • Engineering, Architecture and Aviation
  • Electrical and Electronic Engineering

Sort by

    Masters

  • 303

  • 348

  • 7

  • 1

  • 1

    Engineering, Architecture and Aviation

  • 303

  • 482

  • 48

  • 120

  • 96

  • 30

  • 239

  • 353

  • 118

  • 530

  • 229

  • Europe

    143

  • North America

    84

  • Asia

    27

  • Oceania

    18

  • South America

    6

  • Africa

    5

  • Central America and Caribbean

    3

  • 36

  • 71

  • 4

  • 4

  • 253

  • 28

  • 255

  • 23

  • 9

  • 4

  • 3

  • 289

  • 10

  • 6

303 Electrical and Electronic Engineering Master's Degree Programs

Explore

Learn more about Electrical and Electronic Engineering Master's degree programs

You'll spend a Master's in Electrical and Electronic Engineering going well beyond circuit fundamentals, pushing into areas like power systems design, signal processing, and embedded systems architecture. This level is where you move from understanding how things work to deciding how they should be built.

The learning environment fosters rigorous analytical thinking and independent research across both theoretical study and applied coursework. At this level, you're expected to lead projects, not just complete them. Modules typically cover advanced electromagnetics, control systems, VLSI design, and wireless communications, alongside a substantial research thesis or industry-linked capstone.

The skills you develop here, such as high-frequency circuit analysis, hardware-software integration, and systems modeling, translate directly into roles in aerospace, telecommunications, energy, and semiconductor sectors. Graduates often move into positions like RF engineer, power electronics specialist, or systems architect. Some continue into doctoral research. Because the coursework sits at the intersection of physics and computational methods, you'll also find your expertise relevant wherever hardware performance and reliability are critical design requirements.