<p>Like the top 10 or top 20? I'm very curious to know but I don't want to dish out money for the premium online edition or whatever >_></p>
<p>You can't really rate the undergraduate department. You can rate the faculty, and resources available, which stem from the graduate ranking. I know that Johns Hopkins has probably the best graduate department for Bioe, with UCSD close behind. Johns Hopkins get better funded for their research. It is safe to say that the faculty of both is top notch. Duke also has a good program. I believe MIT has the largest Bioe laboratory.</p>
<p>Undergraduate engineering specialties:
Biomedical / Biomedical Engineering
(At schools whose highest degree is a doctorate)
1 Johns Hopkins University (MD)
2 Duke University (NC)
3 Georgia Institute of Technology *
4 Univ. of CaliforniaSan Diego *
5 University of Pennsylvania<br>
6 Massachusetts Inst. of Technology<br>
7 Case Western Reserve Univ. (OH)
8 Boston University<br>
9 Rice University (TX)
9 University of MichiganAnn Arbor *
11 Northwestern University (IL)
12 University of Washington *
13 Stanford University (CA)
14 University of CaliforniaBerkeley *
15 Vanderbilt University (TN)
16 Univ. of WisconsinMadison *
16 University of Virginia *
16 Washington University in St. Louis<br>
19 Tulane University (LA)
19 University of TexasAustin *
21 Cornell University (NY)
21 University of Utah *
23 Columbia University (NY)
* denotes a public school.</p>
<p>1) Johns Hopkins</p>
<p>everyone else.</p>
<p>This is a category where JHU clearly provides, hand-over-fist, the best team-oriented undergraduate education for it's biomedical engineers. This is clearly the most outstanding, distinctive and challenging undergraduate BME program.</p>
<p>Case is great for financial aid, especially for females -- and I have heard good things about their program.</p>
<p>Hey dragon2owl,</p>
<p>Where did you get that information? USN?</p>
<p>Found it, nevermind.</p>