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Career test for Manhattanville students

See which careers fit your traits — based on what 73+ Manhattanville alumni actually went on to do.

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What Manhattanville grads actually do

Based on 73 notable Manhattanville alumni with Wikipedia pages. Data: Wikidata (CC0).

writer
17
actor
9
politician
7
television actor
6
poet
5
film actor
5
journalist
5
children's writer
5
university teacher
4
stage actor
4
socialite
4
businessperson
4

Notable Manhattanville alumni

Matt Braunger
Matt Braunger
screenwriter · television actor
James Badge Dale
James Badge Dale
actor · television actor
Jamaal Bowman
Jamaal Bowman
American football player · head teacher
Eunice Kennedy Shriver
Eunice Kennedy Shriver
athletics competitor · social activist
Barbara Farrell Vucanovich
Barbara Farrell Vucanovich
politician
Maria Shriver
Maria Shriver
women's rights activist · news presenter
Brittany Underwood
Brittany Underwood
actor · singer
Karen Akers
Karen Akers
actor · singer

Salary outlook for top Manhattanville career paths

National median annual wage (BLS Occupational Employment Statistics).

writer
10th–90th percentile: $40,900$148,240
$73,690
median / yr
politician
10th–90th percentile: $21,010$129,510
$47,290
median / yr
journalist
10th–90th percentile: $31,550$160,360
$57,500
median / yr
businessperson
10th–90th percentile: $80,000$239,200
$206,680
median / yr

Find your fit in 2 minutes

Take the Career Match test — RIASEC framework used by 60,000+ students. See which careers from this Manhattanville alumni list match your traits.

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About Manhattanville

Manhattanville University is a private university in Purchase, New York, United States. Founded in 1841 as a school at 412 Houston Street in Lower Manhattan, it was initially known as the "Academy of the Sacred Heart". In 1917, the academy received a charter from the Regents of the State of New York to raise the school officially to a collegiate level, granting degrees as the "College of the Sacred Heart". In 1937, it became known as "Manhattanville College of the Sacred Heart", and from 1966 to 2024 as "Manhattanville College". In 1952 it moved to its current location in the hamlet of Purchase, New York, a suburb north of New York City. Purchase is inside the town and village of Harrison in Westchester County. Approximately 1,100 undergraduate and 900 graduate students attend Manhattanville, with students coming from 45+ countries and 35+ American states. The architectural and administrative centerpiece of the Manhattanville campus is Reid Hall (1864) which was named after Whitelaw Reid, publisher and owner of the New-York Tribune, one of the leading newspapers in the nation for a century. Next to Reid Hall stand academic buildings on one side and on the other residence halls around a central quad designed by the landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted, also the designer of New York's landmark Central Park in the 1850s and 1860s. Other historic buildings include: the Lady Chapel; the President's Cottage known as the Barbara Debs House; the old Stables; and Water Tower.

Source: Wikipedia · Licensed under CC-BY-SA 4.0.

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