This article reports on a survey of M.C.P. and Ph.D. graduates of Massachusetts Institute of Technology's city planning and urban studies program. The analysis identifies the kinds of organizations employing graduates, the roles they play within those organizations, and the skills which they feel are important for planners. The data includes graduates from the years 1960 to 1971. The study describes how various outcomes have changed with successive classes. Graduates of early years are most likely to work in planning commissions and to describe their roles as coordinators, administrators, and land use planners. More recent graduates are more likely to have jobs in universities, private planning firms, and government agencies. The dominant fields of interest, housing and land use planning, remain constant over time. The kinds of skills valued by the alumni vary in important ways by year of graduation.