Nothing against biomedical, I love anything related to medicine and tissue engineering, but I think majoring in a traditional engineering discipline like EE is always the better way to go as you can easily work in the medical industry and have many other options available.
Yup, currently a BioE major and the job prospects are pretty slim if you just have a BS. Most companies would rather hire ECE or ME majors (heck, my BioE major has a BioElectrical concentration) as they have more experience with the more practical areas of machine design. I’ve heard you have to go back for your Masters/PhD before you can get a real high-paying job in your field. However, I wouldn’t entirely discredit BioE/BME majors as they are great degrees for if you want to go on to Med School (probably the only engineering majors that will prepare you for it similar to some of the STEM majors like bio and chem will).
Nothing against biomedical, I love anything related to medicine and tissue engineering, but I think majoring in a traditional engineering discipline like EE is always the better way to go as you can easily work in the medical industry and have many other options available.
Yup, currently a BioE major and the job prospects are pretty slim if you just have a BS. Most companies would rather hire ECE or ME majors (heck, my BioE major has a BioElectrical concentration) as they have more experience with the more practical areas of machine design. I’ve heard you have to go back for your Masters/PhD before you can get a real high-paying job in your field. However, I wouldn’t entirely discredit BioE/BME majors as they are great degrees for if you want to go on to Med School (probably the only engineering majors that will prepare you for it similar to some of the STEM majors like bio and chem will).
It only good for med school bruh lol...
👍8~謝謝分享👏👏👏
Me whose double majoring in both 🤓
ooh yes