Switch to chemical engineering or stick with biochem?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on a sophomore pursuing a biochemistry/molecular biology degree with aspirations in drug development, expressing concerns about the job market for biology majors. The individual is considering a shift to chemical engineering (ChemE), which appears to offer better job prospects and higher starting salaries. They question the extent of chemistry involved in ChemE and express uncertainty about their math skills, which could impact their ability to succeed in this field. Responses highlight the distinction between roles in drug development—chemists typically invent drugs while chemical engineers focus on mass production. Suggestions include exploring pharmaceutical chemistry as a potential pathway. Overall, the conversation emphasizes the importance of aligning academic choices with career goals in the biotech sector.
lovethesun
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Hi everyone, my first post on here.

I was hoping someone might have a few words of advice/suggestions. I'm a current sophomore currently pursuing biochemistry/molecular biology. My goal is to work in drug development of some sort, at a biotech company or so. Basically, I like to design and "build" things - not machines, but chemicals, substances, cells etc.

I've recently been looking into the world of work a bit more, and it seems chemical engineering fits this profile fairly well. I've also heard that the current situation for biology majors is dire, most end up working as lab assistants in jobs that need no degree, the pay is low, and academia (which isn't a career I want anyway) is hopelessly overrun. Most of the people in my major are pre-med or planning on an academic career. Not to mention that ChemE at my school commands much higher starting salaries and the major seems to be applicable to a lot more fields than biochemistry.

So, my questions: Do I have the wrong idea of what chemical engineering really is? I love science, but is there really all that much chemistry in chemical engineering? As a general idea, I could also see myself working on biofuels and such, but I do want a career that involves science in some form. I've looked at double-majoring, but given that I'm already a sophomore and that ChemE is very difficult on its own, it doesn't seem possible. I'm not especially talented in math (and haven't been getting high grades) but I could manage to get through it, as well as some computer programming courses and physics that I'm missing - I'm just wondering, should I?

Any thoughts? Thanks in advance for answering!
 
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hi Lovethesun,

I got onto this thread and read your post and realized I'm in a very similar situation you were in two years ago. If you're still around, would you mind telling me what you decided to do? Or do you have any new insight into what would be the best major/program for drug development?

I know it's unlikely that you'll reply, but hey, it's worth a shot.

Thanks
 
lovethesun said:
Hi everyone, my first post on here.

I was hoping someone might have a few words of advice/suggestions. I'm a current sophomore currently pursuing biochemistry/molecular biology. My goal is to work in drug development of some sort, at a biotech company or so. Basically, I like to design and "build" things - not machines, but chemicals, substances, cells etc.

I've recently been looking into the world of work a bit more, and it seems chemical engineering fits this profile fairly well. I've also heard that the current situation for biology majors is dire, most end up working as lab assistants in jobs that need no degree, the pay is low, and academia (which isn't a career I want anyway) is hopelessly overrun. Most of the people in my major are pre-med or planning on an academic career. Not to mention that ChemE at my school commands much higher starting salaries and the major seems to be applicable to a lot more fields than biochemistry.

So, my questions: Do I have the wrong idea of what chemical engineering really is? I love science, but is there really all that much chemistry in chemical engineering? As a general idea, I could also see myself working on biofuels and such, but I do want a career that involves science in some form. I've looked at double-majoring, but given that I'm already a sophomore and that ChemE is very difficult on its own, it doesn't seem possible. I'm not especially talented in math (and haven't been getting high grades) but I could manage to get through it, as well as some computer programming courses and physics that I'm missing - I'm just wondering, should I?

Any thoughts? Thanks in advance for answering!

You get to build things as a chemist and pharmacist. How about pharmaceutical chemistry? I am a biochemistry major as well but I'm wanting to go into biology research. Not a pharmacy person
 
biochemprospie said:
hi Lovethesun,

I got onto this thread and read your post and realized I'm in a very similar situation you were in two years ago. If you're still around, would you mind telling me what you decided to do? Or do you have any new insight into what would be the best major/program for drug development?

I know it's unlikely that you'll reply, but hey, it's worth a shot.

Thanks

Drug development or drug production? Chemists typically invent the drug, ChemE's/BioChemE's will typically mass produce the drug (or work on ways it can be mass produced).
 
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