<p>I currently attend community college and will be transferring next summer to get my BS and i chose electrical engineering since i've always wanted to do that. I am thinking of going to grad school for biomedical engineering but i've heard that if i do that i may miss out in other job opportunities while if i do a masters in EE i may have more options, which in a sense makes sense. by the way my specialization in EE would be devices. I'm minoring in Chemistry and physics (if time allows) and i'm really interested in doing Neural engineering or neural interfaces, that's why i was interested in BME but i don't know, it seems like you can get into a field without really being specialized on it now-a-days, what do you guys suggest? i'll appreciate your help, thanks!</p>
<p>There is no reason to make a decision now. I’d recommend waiting until the end of your 3rd year to make a better informed decision. For the moment, focus on doing a smooth transition from the 2-year college to the 4-year university.</p>
<p>for ms decision, wait until you are at building the EE concentration stage, usually 3rd year.</p>
<p>A MS in EE will open up more job opportunities. A MS in BME will open up a small number of jobs. Companies looking for BMEs will often hire EEs. The reverse is much more rare. There’s nothing wrong with a BME MS but make sure that’s what you want to do… which leads us to something that was previously mentioned.</p>
<p>Don’t worry about this now. Worry about it when it’s time to worry about it, like when it’s near time to apply for graduate school.</p>
<p>Thanks guys, you al lare right. I don’t need to stress over it now, and i have decided (for now) to just continue on EE throughout grad school as well, because it’s what i wanna do and in these times, the more opportunities you have, the better lol</p>