As an MIT alum with years of exposure to my fellow students there and now interviewing students including many from MIT for PhD admissions (this year and recently), I will say that there were and are both truly brilliant men and women as well as those who might be better described as more motivated, organized, etc and not Putnam scholars. I have no idea about awards etc other than in college because honestly that was not a thing that anyone cared about though of course many many are/were Olympiad/math competition / science competition entrants/winners. so I have no data and had no idea girls had an easier time with science/math competitions and awards. Also, this thread is kind of funny -- honestly, how hard is it to understand that MIT will not admit someone not academically unqualified under any circumstances, because there is no easy path there, but that of course like any other competitive school they have the luxury to select between numerous qualified kids who will succeed there and sometimes think about how specific skills of applicants will support their existing successful teams? I mean when I was there we all knew oboe was needed and that MIT would go find that sometimes too. This is nothing new and a good lesson for real life. And..MIT doesn't have legacy per se, but you can be sure that they pay attention to VIPS as they should. When I was there the Chinese premier's child was an UG there. Qualified but would really think they ignored that aspect of the application? Don't be stupid. And while I get the stress it causes, it is crazy to overthink this. There are so many fabulous places to study. UCLA has the world's best living mathematician. CS is honestly great at CMU, Stanford, and CS is in unheaval now anyways. And honestly at my highly ranked school I think many things are totally overrated and not worth consideration. Good luck to everyone and glad to hear that MIT is still an exciting place for many. It is a great experience (among so many possible ones). |
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but even MIT says MOST of their applicant pool is qualified.
this isn't unique to MIT. it's true at almost every t20 student-athletes. |
No it doesn’t- no mit coach is getting in 50-60% of the applicants that would play a sport there. None. |
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I'm the one with the daughter who went to MIT and was an athlete. Maybe 4-5 years ago is too way back? I have a kid in this year and it doesn't feel too different.
Anywho - my daughter was waitlisted at HYP, Penn, and Dartmouth. She had been waitlisted early at MIT but then was accepted. Since Ivy Day was after that, it was fine, but otherwise her best option would have been BU with nice merit. I think athletics played a part, for sure. I was there when she had conversations with the coach. I also think we have to realize these applications are being reviewed by young people on the other side of the desk. Outside of the athletics, there's a lot more randomness than we all believe. And inter-office politics. Which coaches just work better with admissions, etc. I encourage my kids not to take this personally - the wins or losses - because there's merit sure but there's luck too. |
You might not like it but they do get 50-60% of the kids that they support. That is the way that it works because otherwise they would not be able to field competitive teams and competitive teams are important to MIT. My family has went through the process while you are arguing back because you don't want to accept the reality. Spend a bit of time on CC or just doing some basic research. It won't make you happy but maybe you be better able to accept that MIT recruits hard and that athletic recruits get huge bumps even if they don't get the guaranteed admissions that some schools give. |
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my kid is waitlisted and really upset..so close but no go!
GTech here we come |
Name the coach and sport at MIT who said this. Directly contrary to what we were told. |
Have 2 girls in STEM at Ivies. Oldest was involved in STEM clubs briefly in middle school, but stopped going because the boys did not listen to her. The research shows that girls leave STEM in middle school. The “knowing who is brilliant” might be based on who answers questions out loud, and it might not be the girls. |
yup daughter in major leadership ec stem--guys often roll their eyes and sarcastic |
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I think the discussion about how much of a bump athletics play in admissions depends upon where you are in the recruit pool.
Top recruits have much stronger recommendations from coaches vs mid pool recruits have a more mild recommendations. |
I appreciate the perspective. I’d be interested to hear more about what you think is overrated, if you’re willing to elaborate. As an Asian immigrant (not the over-represented-two), I often feel surrounded by people who seem to exaggerate the school’s prestige to an almost irrational degree. I’m genuinely interested in hearing more thoughtful opinions about the school’s real strengths and weaknesses. For example, I’ve always found it puzzling that so many Asian students spend years intensely grinding math competitions, only to end up studying CS not math—and then leave software engineering as soon as they realize that quant roles pay better. Financial insecurity is a motivation. However I’m curious why MIT has developed such a strong reputation as the place to go if your goal is to work at companies like FAANG or firms like Citadel/Hedge funds. I personally think the myth of Tx or bust is originated from this insecurity or irrational goals. |
And which sport. And whether M or F. |
Why would I do that? I will tell you that the coach has been at MIT for a long time, knows the system better than and coaches a program that is among the best at MIT. If what I have told you is contrary to what you were told what I can tell you is that your child wasn't high on the coaches list relative others in their sport. The coach was just keeping you around in case they lost the people that they actually wanted. |
100% to both of these comments. In the case of the poster arguing so hard that there is no advantage I suspect that their athlete wasn't high on the coaches list and they were being strung along in case they lost the recruits that they really wanted. As I had mentioned earlier for mine. Female, her HS team was nationally ranked and she had multiple D1 offers (not Ivy) 780/780 so test scores were fine, actually better than fine because of the strong verbal score. 4.6 GPA, 12 or so AP classes so she had the highest rigor available at her school. She was also at or very near the top of the coaches list. She checked every box for top support. |
Just saw this today and as a parent to athletes in a sport who have high stats, I can attest to this. Niche sport. You need to have all the MIT stats in order to talk to the coach. They won't entertain a conversation unless you have a certain SAT and GPA with high rigor. Once you have the stats, then you need the appealing sports record and you can have a conversation. It's 100% a thumb on the scale as we've seen the scenario of who can and cannot talk to MIT. And the rules came from the school rep not our coaches. |