Biotechnology · Florida

Biotechnology colleges in Florida

Biotechnology program coverage in Florida is being verified. Use the filter-first search at /results to find related programs offered in the state.

Biotechnology applies biology, biochemistry, and genetics to engineer useful products like medicines, crops, and industrial enzymes, suiting students who want lab science aimed at real-world manufacturing.

We're still verifying Biotechnology programs in Florida. Try a broader search at /results?q=Biotechnology or browse all colleges in Florida.

What you'll study in a Biotechnology program

  • Molecular and cell biology fundamentals
  • DNA sequencing and recombinant gene cloning techniques
  • Genetic engineering and CRISPR-based gene editing
  • Bioinformatics and biological data analysis
  • Immunoassays and protein purification methods
  • Bioprocessing, fermentation, and cell culture at scale
  • Quality control and good manufacturing practice principles
  • Bioethics and the regulatory pathway for biological products
  • Laboratory safety, documentation, and instrumentation

Where a Biotechnology degree can lead

  • Biotechnologist
  • Research Associate
  • Process Development Scientist
  • Quality Control Analyst
  • Bioprocess Technician
  • Laboratory Technician

Typical pay: Early-career wages vary by employer, region, and experience (BLS, 2024 biological technicians median $52,000).

Biotechnology trains students to turn living systems into practical products, applying biology, biochemistry, and genetics to develop medicines, agricultural crops, environmental cleanup tools, and industrial materials. Coursework blends molecular and cell biology with the chemistry and engineering of how things are actually made at scale, so students learn to grow microbes, plants, and animal cells and to harness them for production. Hands-on lab time is central: students culture cells, sequence and edit DNA, run immunoassays, and analyze biological data with bioinformatics tools. Unlike a general biology degree, which leans toward understanding organisms and the natural world, biotechnology stays focused on translating that science into manufacturable goods, and unlike bioengineering, which centers on designing devices and engineering systems, it emphasizes the biological processes and the bioprocessing steps that bring a product from the research bench into manufacturable batches. Students also encounter the regulatory, quality, and ethics dimensions that govern how biological products are tested, approved, and brought to market.

Many entry-level roles in biotechnology are reachable with a bachelor's degree, and programs are typically structured to pair lecture courses with sustained laboratory work, sometimes capped by a capstone project or an internship in a research or manufacturing setting. There is no single license to practice biotechnology, though graduates working in regulated clinical or diagnostic laboratories may need state credentials tied to those specific roles, so programmatic accreditation and any state licensure requirements should always be verified for the specific program and the work a graduate intends to do. Graduates work in pharmaceutical and biologics development, agricultural and food companies, environmental and industrial firms, contract manufacturing and quality-control laboratories, academic and government research labs, and start-ups, in roles spanning research support, process development, bioprocessing, and quality analysis.

In federal data for the closely related occupation of biological technicians, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a 2024 median wage of $52,000 and projects employment to grow about 3.5% from 2024 to 2034; a bachelor's degree is the typical entry-level education for that occupation. National figures are occupation-wide medians across all experience levels, not starting wages or graduate outcomes.

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