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Are you looking for decision-making aids to help you find the right distance learning program for you? Then you've come to the right place! On this page, we provide you with facts and figures about our distance learning program and show you the advantages and opportunities it offers. We also give you detailed tips on choosing a course.
With over 130,000 students, IU International University (IU) is now the largest private university in Germany. This growth is part of our mission: because we want to provide education for everyone and enable you to go your own way - no matter who you are and where you are in life.
Diversity is key: the composition of our student body is the best proof of this.
The most popular subjects among our students are Health & Social Affairs, Pedagogy & Psychology and Business & Management.
30,6 % Gesundheit & Soziales
23,5 % Pädagogik & Psychologie
16,9 % Management & Wirtschaft
*Daten aus der Erstsemesterbefragung zum Fernstudium (März 2021)
Distance learning has many advantages that allow you to combine your studies with work, family or other commitments.
You decide when you want to start your distance learning course - at any time, without annoying enrollment deadlines and waiting times.
Today, we have to remain flexible. That's why your distance learning programme is online - from application to study scripts and exams.
With your distance learning course, you can not only fulfil yourself, you also benefit from more management responsibility and a higher salary.
Du kannst Dein Fernstudium einen Monat lang unverbindlich ausprobieren. Gebühren für diesen Zeitraum fallen nur dann an, wenn Du Dich für uns entscheidest.

There is definitely no shortage of variety in the German higher education landscape: you are spoilt for choice between countless degree programmes and models. To give you an overview of your options, there are various information services available to you.
Study choice tests
Study choice tests are particularly useful at the beginning of your orientation phase. They give you an initial indication of which degree programme matches your interests and goals. You can find helpful study choice tests here:
Agentur für Arbeit: https://www.arbeitsagentur.de/bildung/welche-ausbildung-welches-studium-passt
Studium-Interessentest (SIT): https://www.hochschulkompass.de/studium-interessentest.html
OSA-Portal: https://www.osa-portal.de/
Student counselling
Our student counselling service will be happy to help you with your choice of degree programme at any time - by phone, email or in our live chat via WhatsApp. We are here to help you with these and other topics:
We will help you choose the right study programme and show you possible subject combinations.
We will inform you about our various study and time models.
We will advise you on your financing options.
Do you need help with your decision? Your personal study advisor is happy to help you!
When looking for the right study programme, it is important that you not only consider your career goals. Your personal interests, characteristics and strengths should play at least as big a role in your decision. Here you can find out which factors make up your personality that are important when choosing a degree programme.
Your personal strengths determine which tasks you can easily access and quickly develop solutions for. They are made up of innate talents and skills learnt over the course of your life. For example, if you have always had an affinity for numbers but do not enjoy reading and formulating creative language, then a degree programme in business administration is far more suitable for you than a degree programme in linguistics and literature.
While the skills are hard skills, the soft skills are character traits. They determine how you behave in certain situations and how you react to your social environment. They are therefore also extremely relevant for your choice of degree programme and career. Soft skills are divided into different competences:
Personal competence concerns how you deal with yourself, for example through self-confidence, self-reflection and self-discipline.
Social skills describe how you interact with other people. It determines, for example, how well you can put yourself in the shoes of your fellow human beings, whether you are a team player willing to compromise or how you react to personal conflicts.
Finally, there is methodological competence, which is closely linked to the other two areas of competence. It is responsible for the way you work and your problem-solving strategies. This competence concerns, for example, your time management, stress management skills or motivating employees, but also presentations in front of an audience or dealing with new media.
Studying and working will be easier for you if you deal with content that arouses your curiosity and moves you. This way, you are not only working to earn money, but also to improve your knowledge and skills within your field of interest. Sometimes it is not so easy to become aware of your own interests. You can explore your interests by consciously asking yourself questions such as: What could I talk about for hours? Why do I enjoy my hobbies? Where would I volunteer? This kind of self-exploration helps you to get to know yourself better and find out what really interests you.
Even if you do not yet have a specific career aspiration, you may already have some ideas about the working conditions of your future job. These preferences are important as they define your future field of work more precisely. For example, do you want to spend time in nature or in the city, do you want to travel a lot or do you value a fixed location, do you want to work with other people or do you prefer to carry out your tasks alone? A degree programme opens up or makes it easier for you to enter certain professional fields. It therefore makes sense to choose a degree programme that is geared towards professions with the working conditions you want.
There are many different personality categorisations. John L. Holland's interest model has proven to be particularly useful for career guidance and occupational psychology. Based on personality, it distinguishes between six interest orientations, which can be used to determine suitability for specific occupational fields.
These people focus on interpersonal relationships and are particularly helpful, cooperative and empathetic. They seek intensive social contact and want to support other people. Study programmes from our Health & Social Work and Education & Psychology fields are ideal.
This group includes those interested in cultural activities and aesthetics. They tend to avoid structured tasks and prefer to work independently and detached from clearly defined guidelines. The realisation of their creativity is particularly important to them, which is why they strive to create their own aesthetic works. This is why they often opt for artistic degree programmes in the field of design and media.
These include competitive, ambitious and success-orientated people. They are motivated by competitive situations and enjoy taking the lead. They enjoy coordinating other people and supervising their activities. They also enjoy presenting and persuading others, for example when acquiring new customers. You prefer study programmes in our Business & Management and Marketing & Communication fields.
People of this type are practically minded. They enjoy physical activities that require strength, manual dexterity and coordination. They prefer concrete tasks and visible results to abstract and theoretical mental constructs. The functioning, construction and maintenance of technical and digitally supported systems are at the centre of their attention. This is why they often choose their degree programme and later career from the diverse field of IT & technology.
People with this field of interest favour carefully structured tasks. They have an eye for detail and organise themselves and their field of activity in a well-considered manner. As they want routine, regulated and precise working methods, they take on tasks such as drawing up and checking contracts, maintaining data or processing business figures. They are therefore recommended to study programmes in the field of Business & Management.
Information on study content & electives
Information on career prospects
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