Dear fellow nanotechnologists:
I am soliciting advice on graduate school. I am considering going to grad school to get into Nanotechnology as applied to Molecular Biology. I have Electrical Engineering and Computer Science degrees from the University of Michigan. However, I've been out of school for 9 years. I have a notion of getting into a Materials Science program. I could combine STM/AFM work with an emphasis on Biological Instrumentation and perhaps Computational or Synthetic Chemistry. Ideally I would like to design nano-machines that perform intracellular operations.
I could get directly into grad school in Materials. If I went back strictly into molecular biology I would have to get an undergrad degree first.
Questions:
1) What are the employment opportunities for a PhD with a degree like this?
I could enjoy doing STM type applications/research even if it wasn't
biology oriented. As long as I was working towards general Nanotechnology
I would be satisfied. But, I hear horror stories of underemployed
materials and chemistry and biology people. I know several chemists and
biologist who think computer programming is a great "trade". I sure would
feel stupid 10 years from now trudging back to random device driver
programming under Windows 2000.
2) What are my chances of getting into a decent school at age 33?
Thanks for any input,
Dave Holden
-- "Reality is a sandwich I did not order", Zippy the Pinhead.