How to become..

<p>a biomedical engineer? I thought the best way was to get an ee undergrad then bme grad. But I somehow think I could still be a bme while taking a minor in bio and do ee undergrad, because I really wanted to do cs grad (for just strictly the knowledge). Could I be a bme with a ee undergrad and bio minor?</p>

<p>A reply would be nice.</p>

<p>Usually you give it 24hrs before you bump your post or you get hit with a site infraction. Also, when asking, it is better to use honey than sarcasm.</p>

<p>Unless of course, instead of a good answer, you want one of two other things to happen: 1) no one answers or 2) you get sarcastic answers in reply.</p>

<p>You told me! Hardy har har</p>

<p>I’m not trying to be unreasonable. But when you see a few hundred views, you start to wonder why no replies are left. Sorry for the sarcasm.</p>

<p>BME’ing incorporates electrical, mechanical and chemical engineering so you’d be safe doing one of those for undergrad but you’d want to get your masters in BME. Can you break into BME’ing with just an EE degree and bio minor? I’m sure you could if you play your cards right and you network properly, but from what I understand the best way to get into BME’ing is with a more general discipline for undergrad and BME for grad.</p>

<p>Could be because not many people here are all thr familiar with BME compare to the big ones like ME an EE. I almost guarantee that’s an issue.</p>

<p>Thank you, Soclydeza.
And boneh3ad, I understand. But with hundreds of views, you’d think someone would know something like the person I just thanked.</p>