
BME Alum Neil Upreti Receives Knight-Hennessy Scholarship
Recent BME graduate Neil Upreti received the Knight-Hennessy Scholarship for graduate study at Stanford University
After four years with us, you’ll have learned a lot. How to work in diverse teams. How to apply technical know-how. How to succeed after failure. But perhaps most importantly, you’ll have discovered a lot about your purpose. Understanding their purpose means that most of our graduates know where they’re heading after graduation, well before putting on the mortarboard and shaking hands with the dean.
Recent BME graduate Neil Upreti received the Knight-Hennessy Scholarship for graduate study at Stanford University
Electrical and computer engineering and biomedical engineering major honored by Duke Alumni Engagement and Development for efforts to streamline alumni-student mentorship programs.
Recent BME alumnus Kishen Mitra is taking his 3D-printed full meniscus replacement to the National Inventors Hall of Fame Collegiate Inventors Competition
We expect that, a few years after graduation, graduates of our program will be on track to become leaders in corporate, professional, and academic communities.
Duke’s Biomedical Engineering program is accredited by the Engineering Accreditation Commission of ABET, under the commission’s General Criteria and Program Criteria for Bioengineering and Biomedical and Similarly Named Engineering Programs.
Our students will have the following capabilities upon completion of their degrees:
Additionally, our students will have these capabilities upon completion of their degrees:
Academic Year | Total Undergraduates | Degrees Awarded |
---|---|---|
2024 | 297 | 89 ◆ |
2023 | 277 | 102 |
2022 | 178 | 67 |
2021 | 182 | 93 |
2020 | 197 | 90 |
Total undergraduates at the beginning of the fall semester. Degrees awarded are for the academic year, first major, only.