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Fun Facts about The Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Massachusetts Institute of Technology (aka MIT) admitted their first students for study in 1865
  • MIT is located in Cambridge, MA
  • Very competitive Admissions process – in 2009 10.7% of all applicants were accepted into MIT
  • Currently there are 7 Nobel Prize Winners who are actively involved with MIT

When I was little, my Dad had me convinced that I was going to grow up with a degree from MIT, I would make a million dollars and buy him a Ferrari Testarossa (which I called a Ferrari Toaster Oven). So for the first 8-10 years of my life, that was my main goal. I didn’t know anything about MIT, how prestigious it truly was, or what type of career I would get from a degree at MIT.

Sadly, my course of study took me quite far away from anything affiliated with MIT, as I chose to go the route of Elementary Education. If I still had the drive to do some sort of engineering or more technological savvy career, however, MIT would be one of my top choices. For more information on MIT and the degree programs they offer, visit their website: MIT.

As noted above, the admissions office only accepts about 10.7% of all of the applicants they receive. They are very selective in the process. Currently, their degree offerings include:

  • Bachelor of Science (SB)
  • Master of Architecture (MArch)
  • Master of Business Administration (MBA)
  • Master in City Planning (MCP)
  • Master of Engineering (MEng)
  • Master of Finance (MFin)
  • Master of Science (SM)
  • Engineer (each degree designates the field in which it is awarded)
  • Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
  • Doctor of Science (ScD)

Undergraduate students also have the opportunity to test drive a few experimental methods of learning, including MIT’s Experimental Study Group (in which 50 freshman maintain a “close-knit” community through the learning process), the Concourse Program (which presents a variety of subjects in a more intimate setting), Media Arts and Sciences Freshman Program (which offers 25 students the ability to participate in research for communication), Seminar XL (a study program for students who want to explore courses deeper than the traditional college course. This program is facilitated by an instructor who holds two 90-minute groups each week).

There are a number of ways that students can learn at MIT. With such a selective admissions process, it enables MIT to try alternate methods of education. For more information on MIT and the degree programs they offer, visit their website: MIT.