July 05, 2008
Rutgers University Department of Biomedical Engineering
Biomedical Engineering Mission, Goals, Educational Objectives and Educational Outcomes

University Mission

Rutgers is New Jersey’s comprehensive public university: a learning community dedicated to excellence in creating knowledge through research and scholarly inquiry; preparing students with the competencies needed for personal enrichments, career development and lifelong learning; and employing knowledge for the common good and to address the needs of a changing society.

School of Engineering Goals

The sound technical and cultural education of the student and the advancement of knowledge through research.  The emphasis is on a thorough understanding of fundamental principles and engineering methods of analysis and reasoning.  All curricula are sufficiently comprehensive to form a foundation for more advanced scientific and technical research, more specialized professional engineering fields, or business and management opportunities in industry.

Biomedical Engineering Program Educational Objectives

  1. Are able to apply the fundamental principles of mathematics and the sciences to solve biomedical engineering problems.
  2. Have the background in engineering design and product realization to meet the needs of government and industry as well as the breadth to make transitions into other professional areas such as medicine, law or biomedical engineering management.
  3. Consider the broad social, ethical, economic and environmental consequences of their work.
  4. Have an understanding of the importance of life-long learning and professional development, and a background that allows and encourages those who are qualified to pursue advanced degrees.
  5. Are effective working individually and in teams and can communicate effectively.

Educational Outcomes For BME Graduates

Each Biomedical Engineering student will demonstrate the following attributes by the time they graduate:

a)   an ability to apply knowledge of mathematics (including multivariable calculus, differential equations, linear algebra and statistics), science (including chemistry, calculus-based physics and the life sciences), and engineering.
b)   an ability to design and conduct experiments, as well as to analyze and interpret data.
c)   an ability to design and realize a biomedical device, component, or process to meet desired needs.
d)   an ability to function on multi-disciplinary teams.
e)   an ability to identify, formulate, and solve engineering problems.
f)    an understanding of professional and ethical responsibility.
g)   an ability to communicate effectively.
h)   the broad education necessary to understand the impact of engineering solutions in a global and societal context.
i)    a recognition of the need for, and an ability to engage in life-long learning.
j)    a knowledge of contemporary issues.
k)   an ability to use the techniques, skills, and modern engineering tools necessary for engineering practice.

In addition, many, though not all, graduates are also expected to demonstrate one or more of the following characteristics:
l)    an ability to work individually or in teams to fabricate and assemble complex biomedical systems.
m)  leadership experience based on involvement in student organizations, project teams and professional societies.

n)         focused experience through undergraduate projects in one or more areas of advanced research.

Contribute
Contribute to Biomedical Engineering at Rutgers.

Click here for more information.
Login
Login:

Password:

Latest News
Li Cai Awarded Busch Biomedical Research Grant
July 01, 2008
Li Cai received a two year $50,000 Busch Biomedical Research Grant to support his research on "Control of CD44 Expression in Breast Cancer Stem Cells". The project is to study the transcription regulation of breast cancer stem cells.

Annual Review of Biomedical Engineering Ranked No. 1 again by ISI
June 23, 2008
For the sixth year in a row, articles in the Annual Review of Biomedical Engineering (ARBME) were cited more often than papers in any of its peer journals, according to ISI's 2007 Journal Citation Report, giving it the highest "impact factor" in its peer group. The ARBME had an impact factor of 11.567 placing it #1 in its peer group of 44 journals, and #2 among all engineering journals. Professor Martin Yarmush serves as the editor-in-chief of the ARBME which published its first volume in 1999.

John Semmlow awarded $750,000 NIH-NIHLB Grant
June 13, 2008
John Semmlow and SonoMedica, Inc. of McClean, VA were awarded a Phase II STTR grant of $750,000 from the NIH-NIHLB over two years to advance his work on detection of coronary artery disease using acoustic information.

Anant Madabhushi awarded $260,000 Wallace H. Coulter Grant
June 11, 2008
Anant Madabhushi has been awarded a 2 year Phase 2 grant for $260,000 from the Wallace H. Coulter foundation for his proposal entitled "Automated Detection of Prostate Cancer from Multi-protocol High Resolution MRI". The Phase 2 award was competitive and of the 25 Phase 1 Early Career awardees only 7 were selected for Phase 2 based on progress made in Phase 1, a new grant application, and an oral presentation in front of a review committee in Florida, in early June. Under the Phase 2 project, Dr. Madabhushi will look to commercialize his ongoing research in developing computerized detection methods for prostate cancer using MRI. Clinical collaborators on this project are Dr. John Tomaszewski, Dr. Mark Rosen, and Dr. Mike Feldman from the University of Pennsylvania.

More News >>

Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey