For colleges and universities within the United States and its territories, you can obtain this information by clicking on the related links section (College Board) indicated at the bottom of this answer section and using the College Board site College MatchMaker search engine. You can research colleges and universities by name, or by programs of study, or by geographical location, size, or combinations of part or all of them. The site will provide you with a list of institutions based on your request. It will give you the schools background, accreditation, degree offerings, programs of study (majors), entrance requirements, tuition and fees, financial assistance, room and board, athletic programs, school activities, etc., and a link to each institutions official web page. Practice navigating this site. It will be well worth the time and effort.
WARNING!!!
When choosing a college or university within the United States, make sure the institution has a regional accreditation. With a regional accreditation you can be assured the coursework and degree you complete will be recognized by all other colleges and universities as well as employers. Below I have listed the six regional accrediting agencies and their geographical areas of responsibility. I am disclosing the below so you do not become a victim of educational scams, institutions that are nothing more than diploma mills, or that do not have the best accreditation, and are eager to take your money for a degree that is worthless. Make sure the institution is accredited by one of following responsible agencies.
Regional Accreditation Agencies
· Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools - Educational institutions in New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the US Virgin Islands, as well as schools for American children in Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East.
· New England Association of Schools and Colleges - Educational institutions in the six New England states (Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont).
· North Central Association of Colleges and Schools - Educational institutions in Arkansas, Arizona, Colorado, Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, North Dakota, Nebraska, Ohio, Oklahoma, New Mexico, South Dakota, Wisconsin, West Virginia, and Wyoming.
· Northwest Commission on Colleges and Universities - Postsecondary institutions (colleges and universities) in Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, and Washington.
· Western Association of Schools and Colleges - Educational institutions in California, Hawaii, Guam, American Samoa, Micronesia, Palau, and Northern Marianas Islands.
· Southern Association of Colleges and Schools - Educational institutions in Virginia, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Alabama, Tennessee and Texas.
Basic requirements for an Astronaut Pilot include the following: 1. Bachelor's degree from an accredited institution in engineering, biological science, physical science, or mathematics. An advanced degree is desirable. Quality of academic preparation is important. Basic requirements for a Mission Specialist include the following: 1. Bachelor's degree from an accredited institution in engineering, biological science, physical science, or mathematics. Degree must be followed by at least three years of related, progressively responsible, professional experience. An advanced degree is desirable and may be substituted for part or all of the experience requirement (master's degree = 1 year of experience, doctoral degree = 3 years of experience). Quality of academic preparation is important.
Whether mathematics is a prerequisite or not will depend on the type of degree you are applying to. Certain schools and universities offer biotechnology as a a biological sciences course. Which means students will be exposed to the clinical aspects of biotechnology. If however, the university of college is offering biotechnology as an engineering discipline then mathematics will be considered a prerequisite for the course
Mathematics
The exact synonym for Applied Mathematics is impure mathematics, which does not deal with the study of the physical or biological or sociological world.
1) The Department of Biological and Environmental Engineering of Cornell University 2) The Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering of University of Maine these two are the main ones, but you want to look deeply this is a list of schools that offer this engineering - http://www.univsource.com/biological.htm
Biomolecular engineering is an engineering principle and practice of chemical engineers. Its purpose is the manipulation of molecules with biological origin.
you need to study mathematics,astronamy,engineering,geology,chemistry,biology,physics and electronics. you dont have to be a champion athelete,but fitness is very important too.
Mathematics has many aplications, these include: Handling money, budgeting, profits ect. (accounting) Predicting physical systems and the sizes and strengths needed from components. (engineering) Calculating chemical and biological system inputs (medicine, chemical labs, biological labs, growth supliments in agriculture)
The majors that require calculus are all mathematics, science, and engineering majors. These include (but are not limited to) mathematics, mathematics education, science education, biology, chemistry, physics, civil engineering, chemical engineering, biological engineering, electrical engineering, biochemistry, pharmeceuticals, and computer science. So about 99% of students in those majors and related majors will take calculus their freshman year (typically the second semester). I say 99% because calculus is a prerequisite for all other courses in those majors (so it must be taken very early), but there is a very small possibility (I'd say 1% chance) that students can take calculus their sophomore year instead.
Biological Method also involve the use of Applied Mathematics to solve biological problem major biological problem in which knowledge of mathematics is used include gene finding protein structure and protein -protein interaction etc Bioinformatics refers to the computational and statistical techniques for the analysis a biological data
To the industry yes. To most graduate schools yes.
Dennis R. Heldman has written: 'Encyclopedia of agricultural, food, and biological engineering' -- subject(s): Food industry and trade, Encyclopedias 'Encyclopedia of Agricultural, Food, And Biological Engineering' -- subject(s): Food industry and trade, Encyclopedias 'Encyclopedia of Agricultural, Food, and Biological Engineering - Print' 'Food process engineering' -- subject(s): Food industry and trade