I’m a high school student, going into my sophomore year, and my family is full of bio engineers, and I’ve been inspired to look into Biomedical engineering. This is very helping, thank you!!
Hi! I'm researching about BE and stumbled upon your video. This program is on my list however, I'm quite scared because I'm not good at math. Does this program require a lot of maths? I need advice pls T_ T
Yes, this program does require a lot of math! I had to take three math courses this year and last year. I believe the math is manageable to learn though, you just need to make sure to ask questions when you have them and practice lots!
I'm in my first semester of college and dont even have a major yet. Biomedical or biomechanical engineering is the only thing I've found interesting but it seems very stressful to me! It was calculus thst made me struggle the most in previous years of school. Then again, I took my only calculus class not in person and not really much interaction with he teacher so that might have been where it got me. Also, how do you manage to focus for such a long time where you can study for basically half of the day? I lose focus and take whatever time breaks.
Yes, I would say biomedical engineering is a very engaging major, my favourite courses are the physics/mechanics and design courses! And to answer your question, I do find it hard to stay motivated the entire day, but I find it helpful to take short 10-15 minute breaks when I'm losing focus then get back to it!
Hey Julia, I'm becoming a Biomed Engnr and I think it's a really cool field. Good video. Would be more helpful if you mention how long each task takes you! Looking forward to a similar video with that info soon
do you do everything on your laptop and paper or would it be better to use a tablet or an iPad? I would want to keep all of my notes digitally and all the maths and diagrams are hard to put onto the MacBook
Do you know what the difference between Biomedical engineering and Biomedical science is ? Like which one actually works in a lab? Trying to pursue an associates in Medical Laboratory Technology and would like to further my education with a bachelors . Any advise and knowledge would help . Thank you!
I'm not super sure, but to my understanding engineering has more applications to the real-world like devloping new products or building infrastructure where as science would be more invovled in research and finding something new. Hope this helps!
@@JuliaPaler thanks so much for replying!!! I'm taking a high school Biomedical Technology class next semester... so we'll see if I like it I guess! :) also is the field competitive?
@@aloe704 I just actually watched another video on that and it said that the field is very competitive, it kind of makes sense because everyone is rushing to find new advancements
I'm in my second year! And I actually have a video about the method that I find effective for taking notes if you would like to check that out :) Here's the link! ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-KE5qqdkLdm0.html
We use a lot of math! In my first year, I took Calculus I, Calculus II, and Linear Systems. This year I've had Multivariable Calculus, Differential Calculus, and Vector Calculus!
Heyy i just saw this video and I’m stressing so muchh. I really want to take biomedical engineering and I didn’t take biology :( but some universities don’t require biology, do u think I’m gonna be fine for not taking biology??
Hey! I think that would just depend on each university's requirements. If you're not able to take Biology, I would consider looking at programs that don't require it for biomedical engineering! For my BME degree I haven't taken any Grade 12 or uni level Bio
@@JuliaPaler ahhhh thank you so much!! The universities that I want to apply for doesn’t require bio but I was stressing over it cuz people say it’s important!! Thank you again :)
@@JuliaPaler ok so first thing I'm really scared of is not being "smart enough", is biomedical engineering really hard? Like brain wrecking? Or can I (an average student at math) study it?
@@laraskerl2705 Personally, I don't believe that you need to be naturally smart and good at math to study biomedical engineering. I think that as long as you know what your strengths and weaknesses are, and put in the work where you need to then you can do it :-) In terms of math, all engineering is a lot of math haha, I have taken six math courses in uni so far and I'm not even done!