Ryan Kohl earned a Bachelor of Science degree in Biomedical Engineering from Saint Luis University and is currently working in regulatory affairs at Lundbeck which is a pharmaceutical company and had many internships through college. The job opportunities are pretty limitless once you graduate from writing software, medical imaging to designing medical equipment an even heading off to medical school.
At school Ryan took a lot of electrical engineering courses along with coding and image processing courses but determined the work was a little to solitary than what he wanted to do and determined it was not the right path for him. His expertise now is in regulatory operations and labeling and there is no typical work day. Trying to create a high quality of life for people is very important to Ryan.
Some advice heading off to college is to get involved in as many things as you can and always ask questions of things you are interested in. And as you launch into your career you need to be flexible and open to change. Don’t say no to opportunities even if you are afraid of failure
Best advice “Things turn out best for people that make the best of the way things turn out”. A personal habit for success is to ask as many questions as possible.
A recommended book is “Phantoms of the Brain” by V.S. Ramachandran.
You can get a free book from Audible at www.stemonfirebook.com and can cancel within 30 days and keep the book of your choice with no cost.
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96: PHD Nanomedicine – Embedding messages into Nano Particles – Joy Wolfram
95: PHD In Quantum Chemistry and Quantum Mechanics-From Professor to Sales-Eva Vankova
94: PHD Biomolecular Structure and Design – Wants to make the world a better place – David Beck
93: PHD Biomedical – Nano Technology For Medicine and Drug Delivery – Alessandro Grattoni
92: PHD Chemical Engineering – Stretchable Electronics – Michael Dickey
91: Aerospace Engineer – You will fail a test or class along the way – Erin Young
90: Mechanical/Robotics/Computer Science – Nothing Cooler than Being a Woman in STEM – Alexis Block
89: Mechanical Engineer – From Sales to STEM Ambassador – Jay Flores
88: Chemical Engineering in Additive Manufacturing 3D Printing – Stacey Delvecchio
87: Bio engineering, Biomedical, Mechanical – Try as many new things – Juhanna Robberts
86: Digital Design Architect – Electrical Engineering – Do what you commit to – Nathanael Huffman
85: Epidemiology and Biostatistics – Stop Starting and Start Finishing! – Rebecca Carter
84: Physics and PHD in Solar Physics studying the Sun – Stephanie Yardley
83: Computer Science and Entrepreneur: You need to architect your career – Chris Smith
82: Civil Engineer – Was not aware of STEM until after her first degree – Mel Butcher
81: Mechanical Engineer focused on Sports Biomechanics – Alison Sheets
80: Science Geek to Management – Biology and MBA – John Heltemes
79: Data Scientist at Facebook – Don’t be afraid to try something new – Brandon Rohrer
78: Computer Science – You need to focus on the human side to solve complex problems – Zoey Gagnon
77: Chemical and Electrical Engineer with some great insights – Stephanie Chin
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