<p>My friend, Tucker, is going to the same CCC I am and he wants to major in BME. What are some transfer friendly colleges for this major that he should be looking into?</p>
<p>CCC = California community college?</p>
<p>Probably the most transfer-friendly colleges for a CCC student would be state universities in California. [Welcome</a> to ASSIST](<a href=“http://www.assist.org%5DWelcome”>http://www.assist.org) suggests:</p>
<p>Bioengineering (Biotechnology) B.S. (UCSD)
Bioengineering B.S. (UCB, UCLA, UCM, UCR, UCSC, UCSD)
Bioengineering B.S. (Bioelectronics Concentration) (UCSC)
Bioengineering B.S. (Biomolecular Concentration) (UCSC)
Bioengineering B.S. (Rehabilitation Concentration) (UCSC)
Bioengineering/Materials Science and Engineering B.S. (UCB)
Bioengineering: Bioinformatics B.S. (UCSD)
Bioengineering: Premedical B.S. (UCSD)
Biomedical Engineering B.S. (UCD, UCI)
Biomedical Engineering: Premedical B.S. (UCI)
Chemical Engineering B.S. Bioengineering Option (UCR)
Engineering B.S. with Biomedical and Clinical Engineering Option (CSULB)
General Engineering B.S., (Concentration in Bioengineering) (SJSU)</p>
<p>Among private schools, USC takes a lot of transfer students and has biomedical engineering as a major.</p>
<p>Thank you! Are there any more private institutes?</p>
<p>Sent from my myTouch<em>4G</em>Slide using CC</p>
<p>How does transferring to a 3-2 engineering program work?</p>
<p>3-2 programs are offered by small liberal arts colleges without engineering; a student studies 3 years at the small liberal arts college, then transfers to a school with engineering to complete the engineering degree in 2 more year. S/he also gets a bachelor’s degree in some other subject from the liberal arts college.</p>
<p>As far as engineering goes, the liberal arts college takes the role of the community college in what you and your friend are doing, but the 3-2 student gets to take upper division courses at the “3” school and complete a non-engineering bachelor’s degree there. However, this is typically a much more expensive route than starting at a community college.</p>
<p>For other transfer-friendly private schools, you have to check their common data sets to see if they admit significant numbers of transfer students.</p>