<p>How do these school compare in Bio Engineering (undergrad)?</p>
<p>Thanks!</p>
<p>How do these school compare in Bio Engineering (undergrad)?</p>
<p>Thanks!</p>
<p>UMich is more on the Mechinal/Electrical side while Cornell leans towards the more biological part.</p>
<p>Basically, UMich = Bioinstrumentation, prosthetic organs
Cornell = Pharma, Environmental (More BioProcess)</p>
<p>I was not aware that Cornell offered Biomedical Engineering to undergrads. If the rankings meaning anything to you, according to the latest USNWR ranking of undergraduate Engineering programs, Michigan was #8 in Biomedical Engineering and Cornell was not ranked (the list only goes to #23). Again, I suspect that's because Cornell does not offer BME to undergrads.</p>
<p>Is there just regular Bioengineering. not Biomedical?</p>
<p>Found this link <a href="http://www.cs.cornell.edu/cv/UgradBio/biooption.htm%5B/url%5D">http://www.cs.cornell.edu/cv/UgradBio/biooption.htm</a> so I'm assuming Cornell does have a Bioengineering program</p>
<p>Cornell has Biological Engineering. Hydralisks, depends more on what you want to do than rankings here. Also Biological Engineering has a Biomedical Concentration (And yes it is offered to Undergrads)</p>