2013-2014 CU Denver Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Bioengineering
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Return to: College of Engineering and Applied Science
Chair: Robin Shandas
Office: Room 6C03 Research 2 - Building P15
Telephone: 303-724-5893
Fax: 303-724-5800
E-mail: bioengineering@ucdenver.edu
Website: www.engineering.ucdenver.edu/bioengineering
Robin Shandas, PhD
Professor
robin.shandas@ucdenver.edu
Specialties: Novel methods for translational bioengineering
Richard Benninger, PhD
Assistant Professor
richard.benninger@ucdenver.edu
Specialties: Optical microscopy; pancreatic islet biology and biophysics; diabetes
Emily Gibson, PhD
Assistant Professor
emily.gibson@ucdenver.edu
Specialties: Microfluidics technology, optical microscopy, and spectroscopy
Kendall Hunter, PhD
Assistant Professor
kendall.hunter@ucdenver.edu
Specialties: Development, diagnosis, and progression of pulmonary hypertension
Craig Lanning, MS
Research Instructor
craig.lanning@ucdenver.edu
Specialties: Digital manufacturing, reverse engineering, medical device and software design
Daewon Park, PhD
Assistant Professor
daewon.park@ucdenver.edu
Specialties: Biomaterials; drug delivery; tissue engineering and regenerative medicine
Richard Weir, PhD
Research Associate Professor
richard.weir@ucdenver.edu
Specialties: Neural Engineering, biomechatronic design, and rehabilitation engineering
Michael Yeager
Assistant Professor
michael.yeager@ucdenver.edu
Specialties: Cardiopulmonary disease, autoimmunity, in vivo cell lineage tracing & imaging
Affiliated Faculty
Students receive instruction from affiliate faculty in the University of Colorado system, including CU Boulder and the CU School of Medicine. Faculty research areas include Imaging and Biophotonics; Cardiovascular Biomechanics and Hemodynamics; Orthopedic Biomechanics; Surgery; Ophthalmology; and Neuroscience Engineering. Please consult our website for more information.
Mission Statement
The Department of Bioengineering bridges the fields of engineering and medicine with a core mission of applying engineering principles and analyses to improving human health. The department will fulfill this mission by providing opportunities for training, research, and service in bioengineering to faculty, students, and residents of Colorado and the greater Rocky Mountain region.
Program Objectives
The Department of Bioengineering offers high quality training in bioengineering that is both flexible and multidisciplinary. A design-based focus permeates every aspect of our training philosophy which can be summarized by the following question: what does the user want and how can I best utilize my bioengineering training to achieve this need? Our academic instruction focuses on developing core competencies in life sciences, quantitative methods, technology, and research methods.
Undergraduate
The program offers a bachelor of science (BS) degree in bioengineering (BS-BIOE) beginning fall 2013. All undergraduate students begin the program with intensive study of the bioengineering core. In consultation with an advisor, each student chooses elective courses, training pathways, and research to fit talents, preparation, and career plans. Students earn the BS degree in bioengineering with a choice of training tracks in basic research, clinical applications, or commercialization of medical technologies.
The BS-BIOE degree will prepare students for careers in the biomedical industry, in hospital, government, or academic research labs, in regulatory agencies such as the FDA, and for further education in graduate school, medical school, or other advanced health sciences program.
The minimum of 128 semester hours is required to earn the BS degree, including 56 credits in pre-bioengineering core and 24 credits in general education core at the Denver campus. This training is complimented by 48 credits in the upper-level bioengineering major and track specialization courses at the Anschutz Medical Campus.
Students in pre-bioengineering must maintain a cumulative grade point average of 3.0. Students who have achieved a GPA of 3.00 or above in pre-bioengineering may apply to the bioengineering major after taking all prerequisite courses. Students with a GPA below 3.00 in pre-bioengineering may be provisionally admitted into the major in bioengineering pending space availability. Students who do not meet these requirements will consult with a BIOE undergraduate advisor to identify an alternative major in engineering or basic sciences. Students in the bioengineering major must maintain a cumulative grade point average of 2.0 and a course GPA of 2.0 in BIOE course work.
Graduate
All graduate students begin the program with intensive study of the bioengineering core. In consultation with an advisor, each student chooses elective courses, training pathways, and research to fit talents, preparation, and career plans. Students earn the MS, Dual MS, MD-PhD, or PhD degree in bioengineering with a choice of training tracks in basic research, clinical applications, or commercialization of medical technologies. Graduate School Rules apply to all programs. Please consult our website for more information on admissions requirements, degree requirements, core courses, training tracks, and faculty research areas.
ProgramsCourses
Return to: College of Engineering and Applied Science
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