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Graduate Studies

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  Biomedical Engineering
  ABBE Faculty:
Jameel Ahmed, Ph.D., Northwestern University; Richard Anthony, Ph.D., University of Illinois; Christine A. Buckley, Ph.D., Northwestern University; J. Peter Coppinger, Ph.D., University of California, Burkeley; Kay C. Dee, Ph.D., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute; Ella Ingram, Ph.D., Indiana University; Glen A Livesay, Ph.D., University of Pittsburgh; Jennifer O'Conner, Ph.D., University of Tennessee; Renee Rogge, Ph.D., University of Iowa; Lee R. Waite, Ph.D., Iowa State University; William Weiner, Ph.D., Syracuse University; Huihui Xu, Ph.D., University of Illinois, Chicago.

Additional Rose-Hulman Faculty:
Robert M. Bunch, Ph.D., University of Kansas; Keith E. Hoover, Ph.D., University of Illinois; Charles Joenathan, Ph.D., IIT (Madras, India); Sudipa Kirtley; Ph.D., University of Kentucky; Dennis Lewis, Ph.D., University of Connecticut; Howard L. McLean, Ph.D., University of Wyoming; Luanne F. Tilstra, Ph.D., Louisiana State University; Arthur B. Western, Ph.D., Montana State University.

Adjunct Faculty: (at Indiana University Medical School, Terre Haute Center for Medical Education)
Walter X. Balcavage, Ph.D., University of Delaware; Taihung (Peter) Duong, UCLA; Mary T. Johnson, Ph.D., Indiana State University; Roy W. Geib, Ph.D., Univ. of Texas Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences at Dallas; Michael W. King, Ph.D., University of California; Margaret M. Moga, Ph.D., Loyola University; Gabi Nindl, University of Hohenheim.

Biomedical engineering combines the mathematical skills, physical science knowledge, and analytical ability of the engineer with the life scientist's knowledge and understanding of biology. Biomedical engineers apply engineering principles to solve medical and biological problems.

The Biomedical Engineering Program at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology is an interdisciplinary graduate program offered through the department of Applied Biology and Biomedical Engineering, which offers the Bachelor of Science and the Master of Science degree in Biomedical Engineering. Faculty members from Applied Biology & Biomedical Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Electrical and Computer Engineering, Chemistry, Physics, and Optical Engineering are associated with the Biomedical Engineering (BE) program.

The program is intended primarily for degree candidates with a B.S. degree in any engineering discipline. Applications from students with different undergraduate majors are considered for admission on a case-by-case basis with the understanding that substantial additional undergraduate coursework may be required.

Master of Science in Biomedical Engineering

Requirements:

36 credit hours of course work
12 credit hours of thesis work
  3 credit hours of graduate seminar

Students are required to take BE511 and 3 other 500-level courses with a BE prefix listed in the graduate studies web page, with the exception that students may not count both BE516: Introduction to MEMS and BE519: Advanced MEMS among the three courses. Students are required to submit their Plan of Study for approval by their thesis advisor and their advisory committee.  

Inquiries about the M.S. degree program in Biomedical Engineering can be addressed to:

Director of Graduate Studies
Department of Applied Biology and Biomedical Engineering
CM148
5500 Wabash Avenue
Terre Haute, IN 47803
  

JOINT BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING/DOCTOR OF MEDICINE DEGREE PROGRAM

Indiana University, Terre Haute Center for Medical Education and Rose-Hulman Institute
of Technology have initiated a jointly administered, combined degree program to support
the increasingly important field of biomedical engineering.  The program provides students
who are principally interested in the practice of medicine the opportunity for in-depth
study in the application of engineering principles to important medical problems and
medically relevant research in a biomedical engineering area of their preference.  For
students who principally view their career goals to lie in the engineering domain the
program affords them an unparalleled opportunity to learn the normal structure and
function of the human body, how they are changed in the diseased state and the
currently accepted methods used for diagnosis and therapy.  Graduates of the program
will receive the degree of M.D. from Indiana University School of Medicine and the M.S.
degree from Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology. It is anticipated that graduates of
the program will be highly competitive for career opportunities in the clinical, academic or industrial arenas.

The program combines a 2 year M.S. Biomedical Engineering program and a 4 year M.D.
program into a package which students can complete in only 5 years.


Admissions to the joint Master of Science/ Doctor of Medicine degree program is
a dual
process. Students entering the program will be independently accepted into the graduate program at RHIT and the doctor of medicine program at IU School of Medicine
.

Students who successfully enter this program will have an advisory committee consisting of 5 members. Both Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology and the Indiana University School of Medicine will appoint two members to the committee. The fifth member will be the Director of the Terre Haute Center for Medical Education. The Advisory Committee will review each student's progress each semester.

Three courses (16 quarter credits) taken during the first two years in medical school are shared requirements. These are Medical Biochemistry, Gross Anatomy, and Physiology. Additional academic program requirements include 20 credits of coursework, 12 credits of thesis, and 3 credits of graduate seminar. Joint research projects are encouraged, but the research and course requirements are tailored to individual student needs.

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