Dennis O'Neill wrote:I have an undergraduate degree in bioengineering from the University of Illinois at Chicago.
Coming from someone who
has a BSBE, and after talking to a bunch of my classmates who also have one (from different universities), you don't know
anything after getting an undergrad degree in bioengineering or biomedical engineering. As he said, he had a lot of lower-level courses in a wide variety of topics, but nothing in-depth enough to be the anything approaching an expert in anything. He is looking at, at best, a lower-level position in a biomedical engineering firm, and even then they have to train you to be of any use to them. The coursework is just too broad without enough depth, you have a solid grounding in just about everything related to science or engineering but no in-depth knowledge of anything.
I am looking at their course catalog and it is pretty much the same as mine was. The only difference is they appear to not take any graduate-level courses as undergrad, which every BE or BME deparment I have heard of requires you do (which means he probably has less depth than many in his field). Anybody who claims he or she is an authority in anything with nothing but a BSBE is an idiot or a liar. I could tell softmore year looking at the course catalog that I wasn't going to get enough depth in anything. That is what a masters or a PhD is for.
This is nothing but argument from false authority. He talks like having a BSBE is supposed to impress us. Perhaps it might impress some people (not you guys, obviously) who don't know what such a degree entails, but it won't impress anyone else who has such a degree.
This is not to make light of BSBE degrees, they are damn hard degrees (all the schools I have visited consider it to be among their toughest degrees, most consider it their toughest). You get vasts amount of knowledge and extremely difficult coursework in an extremely wide range of disciplines, you are expected to be competent in just about every major area of engineering and a number of major areas of science, and you are expected to juggle coursework that has absolutely nothing in common besides that it requres massive amounts of advanced mathematics. It is hard, it is long, and you are required to learn a lot. But you are
not and expert. Competent in something does not qualify you to overrule experts in the field.
When two opposite points of view are expressed with equal intensity, the truth does not necessarily lie exactly halfway between them. It is possible for one side to be simply wrong.
-Richard Dawkins