Skip to main content
x
Coulter BME Graduate Program Ranks No. 1 in Nation for First Time
Posted April 25, 2023

 

 

 

For the first time in its history, the Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering at Georgia Tech and Emory University is the No. 1 graduate program in the nation, according to the latest rankings from U.S. News & World Report.

 

The spring rankings reflect peer institution assessments of several factors, including research activity, faculty resources, and academic achievements of entering students. Coulter ties Johns Hopkins University for first place and remains the top graduate program among public universities.

 

“Our No. 1 graduate ranking is a reflection of the hard work and dedication to excellence from our faculty, staff, and students,” said Alyssa Panitch, Wallace H. Coulter Department Chair. “The rankings reflect their never-ending quest for knowledge and to improve human health through education, research, and innovation.”

 

Coulter joins all disciplines within Georgia Tech’s College of Engineering that are in the top ten. In this year’s rankings, the College rose two spots to No. 5 overall among graduate engineering programs nationally, which also ranks it third among public institutions.

 

Contact

Kelly Petty  
Communications
Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering

 

Latest BME News

Five Tech students received the inaugural Patti Grace Smith Fellowship, providing access to prestigious internships and mentoring in aerospace.

New post created in Coulter Department of BME to achieve goals of increasing diversity

Computational Neural Engineering Program at Georgia Tech and Emory holds first annual online retreat

"Discussions on Science and Diversity” at Yale video series features Manu O. Platt

Series of workshops will equip faculty members with tools to intervene and address situations where students feel marginalized or excluded.

Appointment focuses on translating BME’s innovative teaching methods into formalized training programs for faculty and students

Nominators said Platt builds a culture of family in his lab and models what it means to be “a socially conscious scientist and engineer.”

Platt’s 2017 BMES diversity lecture ended with long, enthusiastic, supportive applause