About the course
The promise of regenerative medicine is truly remarkable. Over the last two decades, significant breakthroughs in understanding within the regenerative medicine and tissue engineering fields have yielded a more intimate understanding of the functioning of human tissue. In the future, new technologies may deliver islet cells for diabetes, neural regeneration for spinal cord injuries and more substantial heart repair. In addition, as biology, bioengineering and medicine continue to converge, the regenerative medicine field may succeed in building three-dimensional organs like hearts, kidneys or livers.
Traditionally, researchers in the BioE program focus was on replacement of tissues or growing cell-based substitutes outside the body for implantation into the body. However, as the field has evolved over the last decade, researchers have broadened their approach from a focus on tissue engineering to one that includes repair and regeneration. Scholarships - View all scholarships Internships
Start dates and prices
Course fees are indicative and should be used as a guide. Speak to a counsellor to get an accurate price.
Duration: 1 Year(s)Fees: US$43,710
How to apply
Entry requirements for Georgia Institute of Technology
The general requirements for being considered for the Bioengineering Program are: · B.S. Degree in Engineering or Science · 2 years of calculus and differential equations · 1 year of calculus-based physics · 1 year of chemistry (preferably organic) preferred · 1 semester of biology preferred · Minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper based) or 25 (computer). TOEFL ibt: 100.
English language requirements
7.0
Overall IELTS band score
Book IELTS
About IELTS
Practice and prepare
TOEFL Internet based overall score: 90.0
Application deadline:
This date isn’t available – speak to an IDP counsellor to get detailed information.
Further information
Career outcomes
Reviews and rankings
World ranking
36th / 1250
THE World ranking
What our students think
We’ve haven’t received any reviews for this institution yet.