| The IITs have been hurt the IIT name being given to so many more schools in the last 15-20 years. They don't have the funding support or endowment to be exceptional at a global scale in 2024. Comparing any IIT to MIT just doesn't make sense. MIT does like taking the best IIT grads for grad programs though! |
| Most of the MIT responses were about the experiences of boys. Are there more people who can chime in with girls there? I know MIT has come a long way since when we were looking at colleges but it was a place I know my wife who went to a top 5 school elected not to apply to at all. |
You can’t just cross register. You have to be admitted as a transfer (not easy) |
| My daughter loved her experience at MIT. Faculty cared and helped her get several job offers from "top companies" in her field. She really believes the faculty connections are the best part of MIT. |
My DD is a current student. Loves it and is thriving. If your child (or you) is on the fence, take a look at the required classes (GIRs). Does that look like a good time? Check out the Banana Lounge. Are these your people? GIRs: https://catalog.mit.edu/mit/undergraduate-education/general-institute-requirements/#text Banana Lounge: https://1962.alumclass.mit.edu/s/1314/bp19/interior.aspx?sid=1314&gid=53&pgid=252&cid=101444&ecid=101444&crid=0&calpgid=49618&calcid=98656 |
Excellent response. Very evocative. I'm just interested in MIT because a friend went there. But your post helps me "get it". |
DP. That's fine. Music isn't very open to nonmajors, so MIT would likely have more opportunities. I've heard good things about music composition there (a few years ago, albeit). |
That's funny!
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| DD is a current student. The amount of time she puts into studying and barely gets her a B. She says you walk into an exam and its nothing you have ever seen, you just have to see if you can figure it out. Socially she is doing really well. She has dropped classes too because it wasn't a fit with the professor's teaching style. The UROPs very hard to find in engineering if you didn't do robotics, 3d printing etc in high school or you aren't going the PHD route - the professors don't want to invest time and they don't need free labor - they have plenty of cash; they need folks who don't take a lot of time to get up to speed. You may luck out in finding a good advisor but for undergrads, its your peers that help you out. She says you sink or swim together. Last week, she told me she wouldn't recommend folks attend the school unless they want to have a soul sucking experience. I ask her if she is learning and she says yes but she says whats the point of doing all this work when in the end you will be compared to others who have better GPAs when getting a job or going to grad school. She now realizes its not worth all the struggling etc for the MIT name but she is in too deep so she will finish it out. I feel for her. |
We need more schools like MIT - admitting academic excellent, ambitious and kind students |
I had two go there. DD & DS. Loved every minute of their time there. They both chose to attend because they love math and the courses for their chosen field of study. Another DS got in they went to a B-tiered engineering school because sports and the curriculum of their choice of study. All ended up going to grad school all had similar trajectories in terms of jobs. |
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One thing society seems to lack today is a genuine commitment to advancing humanity. Higher education was meant to serve that purpose, yet our collective pursuit of knowledge has too often been overshadowed by greed.
Artificial intelligence holds immense potential, but its true value lies in the morality and responsibility that guide its use. I was struck by comments noting that MIT seeks students who are not only academically exceptional but also kind. That emphasis on kindness is profoundly important — perhaps even more so than pure intelligence — because while humans possess emotion and empathy, technology does not. |
This is interesting. I would have thought it would be quite easy at MIT. I guess I'm wrong. |
| Current parents - Do all students have to take each of chem, bio, math and physics? My kid is currently taking ap physics c mechanics, but hates it and wants to major in either bio or bio-engineering in college. This all assumes, of course, that my kid is going to get in, which i know is a long shot. |
In terms of the "floor", I would say Caltech and Oxbridge has it beat. Maybe also Toronto engineering science, although that's a specific program. |