Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son got in. He was ranked #2 in his public HS in OH. He ran cross country varsity all 4 years and did another sport for fewer years. No other notable ECs, he did have summer jobs that were not related to his field. He had near flawless SATs, and was a straight A student in his junior and senior years. His math/science scores were particularly high even in most rigorous APs. His essay was pretty standard. He is an Asian male.
His HS was not particularly competitive and MIT has been a hard adjustment for him. He shared a bit of imposter syndrome.
This is BS especially when you mentioned he is an Asian male. Zero chance.
np.. why? I believe it. They are from OH. Now, if they said they were from DC area, then it would be way more difficult to get in.
https://registrar.mit.edu/statistics-reports/geographic-distribution
Not for Asian males.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son got in. He was ranked #2 in his public HS in OH. He ran cross country varsity all 4 years and did another sport for fewer years. No other notable ECs, he did have summer jobs that were not related to his field. He had near flawless SATs, and was a straight A student in his junior and senior years. His math/science scores were particularly high even in most rigorous APs. His essay was pretty standard. He is an Asian male.
His HS was not particularly competitive and MIT has been a hard adjustment for him. He shared a bit of imposter syndrome.
This is BS especially when you mentioned he is an Asian male. Zero chance.
np.. why? I believe it. They are from OH. Now, if they said they were from DC area, then it would be way more difficult to get in.
https://registrar.mit.edu/statistics-reports/geographic-distribution
Not for Asian males.
https://mitadmissions.org/apply/process/profile/
If you extrapolate women/men %, and assume half of the Asian 47% are men and half women, that would make it 23.5% Asian male.
White male would be 18.5%.
Hispanic male 5.5%
Black male 2.5%.
So, Asian males is the largest male group.
However, there are probably more Asian males applying to MIT than any other group. In that way, it is harder for Asian males to be accepted to MIT.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son got in. He was ranked #2 in his public HS in OH. He ran cross country varsity all 4 years and did another sport for fewer years. No other notable ECs, he did have summer jobs that were not related to his field. He had near flawless SATs, and was a straight A student in his junior and senior years. His math/science scores were particularly high even in most rigorous APs. His essay was pretty standard. He is an Asian male.
His HS was not particularly competitive and MIT has been a hard adjustment for him. He shared a bit of imposter syndrome.
This is BS especially when you mentioned he is an Asian male. Zero chance.
np.. why? I believe it. They are from OH. Now, if they said they were from DC area, then it would be way more difficult to get in.
https://registrar.mit.edu/statistics-reports/geographic-distribution
Not for Asian males.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son got in. He was ranked #2 in his public HS in OH. He ran cross country varsity all 4 years and did another sport for fewer years. No other notable ECs, he did have summer jobs that were not related to his field. He had near flawless SATs, and was a straight A student in his junior and senior years. His math/science scores were particularly high even in most rigorous APs. His essay was pretty standard. He is an Asian male.
His HS was not particularly competitive and MIT has been a hard adjustment for him. He shared a bit of imposter syndrome.
This is BS especially when you mentioned he is an Asian male. Zero chance.
np.. why? I believe it. They are from OH. Now, if they said they were from DC area, then it would be way more difficult to get in.
https://registrar.mit.edu/statistics-reports/geographic-distribution
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son got in. He was ranked #2 in his public HS in OH. He ran cross country varsity all 4 years and did another sport for fewer years. No other notable ECs, he did have summer jobs that were not related to his field. He had near flawless SATs, and was a straight A student in his junior and senior years. His math/science scores were particularly high even in most rigorous APs. His essay was pretty standard. He is an Asian male.
His HS was not particularly competitive and MIT has been a hard adjustment for him. He shared a bit of imposter syndrome.
This is BS especially when you mentioned he is an Asian male. Zero chance.
Anonymous wrote:My son got in. He was ranked #2 in his public HS in OH. He ran cross country varsity all 4 years and did another sport for fewer years. No other notable ECs, he did have summer jobs that were not related to his field. He had near flawless SATs, and was a straight A student in his junior and senior years. His math/science scores were particularly high even in most rigorous APs. His essay was pretty standard. He is an Asian male.
His HS was not particularly competitive and MIT has been a hard adjustment for him. He shared a bit of imposter syndrome.
Anonymous wrote:Accomplished in STEM. It’s that simple- IMO, National robotics winners, etc. Sure people will respond with their 5 DCs who all got in without them, but for the most part, MIT likes shiny awards