<p>What are some good undergraduate colleges for a biomedical degree? Well actually the best undergraduate biomedical colleges!</p>
<p>[RIT</a> - Programs of Study](<a href=“http://www.rit.edu/programs/program_detail.php?id=709]RIT”>http://www.rit.edu/programs/program_detail.php?id=709) </p>
<p>RIT (NY) is a highly regarded school. Did you mean Biomedical Engineering?</p>
<p>Yes I mean biomedical engineering sorry I didn’t make that clear</p>
<p>I see you are a high school sophomore! Good for you, you are starting early! </p>
<p>Set up an Excel Spreadsheet of colleges for yourself & keep adding & deleting as you go along! You can make it as detailed as you like: SAT Scores, ACT Scores of last incoming Freshmen Class, Acceptance Rates, Average Percentage of Need Met, Housing Guaranteed for all 4 years? Cost of Attendance, Male & Female Percentages, Number of Undergrads, Merit Aid-GPA Needed to Keep it, etc.</p>
<p>Stanford has bioengineering, biomechanical engineering (combines bio and mechanical), and biomedical computation (combines bio and CS). No biomedical engineering I think, although they consider the two latter ones subsets of biomedical. </p>
<p>Stanford is top notch for mechanical engineering, number one in CS, and I think it’s pretty good in biology too. So it makes sense that combinations of these will likewise be very strong, and these programs are definitely on the rise at Stanford. </p>
<p>Berkeley, MIT, and the other traditionally strong engineering programs are other good places to learn more about.</p>
<p>Take a look at University of Maryland: Their Gemstone Program is the honors program for science and engineering-oriented freshman and they have outstanding bio-engineering program. One advantage is that it’s located adjacent to a focal point for the bioscience/biotech industry on the I-95 corridor. NIH is also next door. </p>
<p>[Maryland</a> bioscience poised to bloom, FDA chief says](<a href=“http://www.gazette.net/stories/022208/businew193518_32358.shtml]Maryland”>http://www.gazette.net/stories/022208/businew193518_32358.shtml)</p>
<p>I believe the University of Minnesota-Twin Cities has a biomedical degree or something similar. They also have a pretty solid engineering program to boot.</p>
<p>case western? im not sure on this, can somebody help?</p>
<p>The very best?</p>
<p>Johns Hopkins is the obvious answer. Georgia Tech also has a great program (jointly with Emory). So does Duke.</p>
<p>Duke University.</p>
<p>University of California-Berkley, San Diego
Stanford
Emory
Duke
University of Maryland
Johns Hopkins
Northwestern
Vanderbilt
Wake Forest</p>
<p>I second JHU. Also, Duke, WUSTL, UPenn, MIT, and GTech.</p>