<p>Hey guys, I just want to know your opinions on each of the majors listed above. I researched a couple of stuff before. I took AP Calculus AB and AP Chemistry in high school and the college that I am going to will be accepting those credits which are equivalent to three courses. Those three courses are also taken in both biomedical and chemical engineering, which means that I can skip those courses regardless of where I am going for. </p>
<p>I also looked at their salary. It seems that chemical engineers make a little more than biomedical engineers do. </p>
<p>As far as salary-wise, what about the difficulty of the courses in each of the majors? Which one is easier/harder? Also, what about the job outlook for each of them? I researched a lot about that factor and it seems that biomedical has a better job outlook than chemical has. </p>
<p>My problem is that I don't want to spend so many years studying for my major and have difficulty finding a job after graduation. In your opinion, which one has easier/harder courses and how are their job outlook in the near future? Please help me in this dilemma :/ Thanks!!</p>
<p>UC Berkeley, Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, Georgia Tech, CMU, and MIT have career surveys listing what graduates of various majors are doing job and graduate school wise. You may want to look at them.</p>
<p>Difficulty is relative to the person, Biomed is a mix of EE and MechE with applications geared toward the medical field while ChemE is its own major but has some overlap with MechE. Biomed is usually used as a pre-med course and the job outlook for a BS isnt all that great as the field is still small but its growing, traditional ChemE jobs are slowing down but in both cases an engineering degree can open many doors including non-technical positions.</p>
<p>^It’s probably better than both in terms of job opportunity and pay. But for difficulty, like viciouspoultry said, depends on the person like ice cream flavor.</p>