You can definitely get into a good medical school with a bachelor's in mechanical engineering. Though most people who attend medical school have either Biology or chemistry majors, it doesn't say anywhere you have to. As an example, my undergrad was in physics.
The only caveat to that is you have to take a certain list of classes in order to apply to medical school. This list is basically the same for all med schools that I know of. If I remember correctly, there is only a handful of those classes, and the rest can be anything you want.
George W. Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering was created on 1885-10-13.
Research thus far indicates the following UM Wolverines football players also attended UM Medical School: 1. Chris Hutchinson, UM undergrad class 1992; UM Medical School class 1996 2. Gannon Dudlar, UM undergrad class 1993; UM Medical School class 1997 3. Marc Milia, UM undergrad class 1993; UM Medical School class 1997/1998 Any others?
4 years in undergrad school. 4 years in med school. and 3-5 years of residency training.
Mechanical engineering covers a wide range of possible degree's based on what exactly you are going to specialize in. I would suggest looking to the colleges that are available to you and the accrediting they have because choosing which school to go to. Also, ask a few places that specialize in mechanical engineering and see if one school would look better to them.
It depends what type of school (public vs. private) for undergrad and medical school the surgeon attends, but it will cost anywhere from $350 to $550 USD.
Work in factories, power plants, dams. Machine design. Technical School
U cannot become an mechanical engineering . You can become a mechanical engineer in a minimum of 4 years after you pass your high school.
It is about the same difficulty as Mechanical Engineering. Where I went to school, it was in the same department and most of the classes were the same except the specialized aero courses.
Mechanical Engineering is one of several types of education offered by the College of Engineering at a four-year university. MIT (Cambridge) is among the most respected in the country, as is Stanford and UC-Berkley. A complete list is here: http://www.mechanicalengineeringschools.org/
I don't believe there is any co-relation between the types of TV someone watches and mechanical engineering knowledge. Stop watching cartoons and go to school.
You'll need an undergrad degree, then go to medical school, then complete a residency, and then if desired,, study for board cerfifcation.
Pathologists must fulfill the basic curriculum as any other medical doctor - essentially 4 years of undergrad, 3-4 years of medical school, and 2-8 years of residency.