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<p>Those are grad rankings. For undergrad, Duke’s BME is 2nd and NU’s Mat Sci is 5th.</p>
<p>[Undergraduate</a> Engineering Specialties: Biomedical - Best Colleges - Education - US News and World Report](<a href=“http://colleges.usnews.rankingsandreviews.com/best-colleges/spec-doct-biomedical]Undergraduate”>http://colleges.usnews.rankingsandreviews.com/best-colleges/spec-doct-biomedical)
[Undergraduate</a> Engineering Specialties: Materials - Best Colleges - Education - US News and World Report](<a href=“http://colleges.usnews.rankingsandreviews.com/best-colleges/spec-doct-materials]Undergraduate”>http://colleges.usnews.rankingsandreviews.com/best-colleges/spec-doct-materials)</p>
<p>Having said that, that difference means absolutely nothing. Both are top programs.</p>
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<p>Honestly, I think you’re focusing on the wrong aspects. Yes, in deciding where to attend college (or choosing a major) in general, the chance of a good job/grad program after graduation is usually at the top of the list. But anybody who tells you that going to Duke BME over Northwestern Mat Sci or vice versa is going to help you land a better job/grad program, is either lying or misinformed. The difference is really really negligible either way. It’s going to have a lot more to do about YOU than the school. BOTH will prepare you very well for whatever you decide to do upon graduation.</p>
<p>What I personally think you should be focusing on is, where do you feel more comfortable? Where do you think you’d enjoy your four more years more? Where do you think will challenge you as an individual and help you grow academically and socially? Where would you be proud to call your alma mater? Go with your gut. If something just feels right, do it.</p>
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<p>That’s no true (the mat science part). One of Duke’s four departments is called “Mechanical Engineering and Material Science.” So, yes, while it’s incorporated into the ME department, there are TONS of classes to take in mat sci and lots of professors doing research in that field. Hear about the invisibility cloak that was successful recently? That was at Duke.</p>
<p>[How</a> to Build an Invisibility Cloak | Materials Science | DISCOVER Magazine](<a href=“http://discovermagazine.com/2006/nov/building-invisibility-cloak]How”>http://discovermagazine.com/2006/nov/building-invisibility-cloak)</p>
<p>There is NOT a lot of industrial eng going on at Duke, though, so if you’re interested in that, it’s probably not the best choice. There is a far amount of chem eng going on actually as well. Duke is really interdisciplinary in the research, so even if a department doesn’t exist, there is most likely a professor whose research largely falls under that field. This interdisciplinary nature is fostered by not only the proximity of the medical school (unlike Northwestern where you have to go all the way to downtown Chicago
), but by how the research buildings are organized. I was in a BME lab working with a biochem PhD student, next to a bio lab, which was next to a genetics lab, next to a computational biology lab. It’s structured based on research topics as opposed to straight up departments a lot of the time.</p>
<p>I honestly don’t know how all these high school seniors absolutely know what type of engineering they want to go into without having experienced it. I certainly didn’t. Maybe people know more about themselves than I did, who knows. But just as a general piece of advice, keep an open mind. Your interests will likely change when you actually take courses and get into research. At Duke, also it is INCREDIBLY easy to double major in two engineering departments. ME/BME is quite common, so you could dabble in both material science and BME if you want. And when I say “easy” I don’t mean that the courses are easy. Simply that double majoring is pretty much the same as single majoring, just you take different classes. There aren’t any more requirements. As opposed to taking 6 BME elective for examples, you have to take 3 BME and 3 ME. So, it’s just more spread out. I have no idea what it’s like at Northwestern, but looks like Sam Lee could help you out there.</p>
<p>In the end, I think comparing these two fine institutions and programs based on what they’d offer you from a career/grad school prospect viewpoint is a bit misguided. They’re both top programs and will prepare you well. You should choose based on where your heart is set. If you go to Duke, would you always be asking “what if I had gone to Northwestern? How would it have turned out?” Alternatively, if you choose Northwestern, will you ask yourself “What if I had gone to Duke? What am I missing out on?” If you think you’d ask yourself anything like that, that’s your answer. </p>
<p>Good luck!</p>