Program overview
<p>As a graduate student in biomedical engineering, you’ll have the opportunity to explore your specific research interest in cellular and biomolecular engineering, biomechanics, or biomedical information processing in collaboration with our esteemed faculty in the Russ College of Engineering and Technology, the Colleges of Osteopathic Medicine, Health Sciences and Professions, and Arts and Sciences, and the Edison Biotechnology Institute.</p><p>To graduate, you’ll earn 33 semester credit hours, a portion of which are thesis hours that culminate in a written thesis, as well as an oral defense of your thesis. You’ll work with your advisor and committee to develop an individual course of study, capitalizing on the curriculum’s flexibility to tailor the program to support your own engineering and scientific interests.</p>
Indian students comparing this program should review the university profile, entry requirements, fee range, intake availability, and how the course connects with long-term career plans in the USA. If you are still exploring, compare this option with the wider USA programs database and the Ohio University profile.