Tekeyia, Rocky Mount asked Catherine Ross, K2M, Inc AddedThursday, October 22, 2015 at 2:22 AM Would it matter if I studied biomedical to find a biological engineering job? Hello, I see many colleges use bioengineering interchangeably with biomedical engineering. The college that I am looking at to transfer to focuses on biomedical engineering, but I'm more interested in biological engineering. Would it matter if I studied biomedical to find a biological engineering job? Do jobs see them as being two separate careers or the same? Related to Bioengineering/Biomedical, Choosing a Degree Reset Sort By Default Esha Singh , Corning Life Science Answered Thursday, October 22, 2015 at 2:22 AM Hello Tekeyia. Bioengineering is the Basically an application of engineering in creating artificial organs, chemicals, drugs and tissues. However the biomedical engineering uses technologies and principles for designing, maintaining and calibrate all the devices and equipment that we see in the hospitals, research labs , manufacturing units of medical devices etc. Both Fields are totally different. Both have different job perspectives. as you can get it from above . Catherine Ross , K2M, Inc Answered Thursday, October 22, 2015 at 2:22 AM Hello Tekeyia, I usually think of biological engineering more synced to agriculture and biology (engineering behind plants, crops, animals, etc). Biomedical engineering is the term I use for the engineering of the human body. Some schools might use them interchangeably, but it really is based on what you are interested in. I think any good resume will have an objective statement at the top where you can describe what your goals are for employment and what area specifically interests you. Also, if you want to do engineering with the human body (medical devices, pharma, etc) you should make sure that the program you are taking offers courses in that area (Tissue Engineering, Cardiovascular Fluid Dynamics, etc) to ensure your course load will mesh with your career goals.