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Unread 09-09-2010, 09:34
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Petey Petey is offline
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AKA: Chris Peterson
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Re: I'm an MIT Admissions Officer. Ask me Questions!

Quote:
Originally Posted by kstl99 View Post
My daughter, who is a sophomore and would love to go to MIT was pushed into taking a third year of French instead of a higher math, although they did work out a compromise. Is a third year of a foreign language really that important to MIT? More generally, what is the best way to know?
kstl -

A third year of foreign language is good, but not required, for MIT. We do require bio, chem, physics, and calculus in high school. What math did she not take, and what math is she taking?

If she's on track to complete calculus she's fulfilling the basic requirements. If she can take AP/IB/honors calculus, all the better.


Quote:
Originally Posted by Zholl View Post
here's a question: I have a 3.2 GPA and an ACT score of 35 without the writing, though I expect to score similarly on the SAT next month, but I'm 124 out of 300 and some students (I had to give my only transcript copy to my engineering teacher), so I'm obviously not that highly ranked in my school. what would you say my chances of acceptance are?

some other information: I'm currently in my second year of calculus, and am taking AP physics and a third year of engineering, as well as a few other AP courses and such, putting me at 8 semesters of math, English, and sciences, 5 semesters of history/social studies, 4 semesters foreign language, 1 semester of microeconomics, and 12 semesters of music classes.
Zholl -

It's impossible for me to give you a chance on your acceptance. See: http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/...hance-mit.html

Your scores are great, but the grades attending your class rank would likely give us pause. We would want to look at your grades, look at your classes, and look at your teacher recs, and try to see why you're ranked in the middle of the pack though your testing ability is obviously quite high.

If you can tell me a little bit more about your grading situation (either in this thread or via PM) I might be able to help more.

Other than that, your course selection is certainly good.


Quote:
Originally Posted by Greg Marra View Post
I am worried this thread is going to descend into people worrying a lot about their grades and test scores. There are a lot of things that make you an interesting person to colleges. Among the top is passion.

Be yourself and do what you love.
Greg -

Agreed 100%. Grades and scores are important in our process, but only in a very narrow way. Briefly, we have decades of data about students, comparing how they did in high school on grades and tests to how they performed once admitted to MIT. And because we have these data, we (being MIT) built complex models that demonstrate what sort of academic profiles are good matches for MIT and what sort of profiles are not.

The first thing we do in our admissions process is take a pass through to distinguish the academically qualified from the unqualified as per above. Maybe 50% of the applicants every year are perfectly academically qualified for MIT.

The hard part is going from the ~8,000 kids who are qualified to the ~1,500 we accept. And that's where grades and scores become utterly unimportant and your passion matters.

I couldn't agree with you more, and I certainly hope this thread does not become a grade/score worryfest. It's something that we really try to depressurize in our process.

For more, I recommend this blog entry by our Associate Director of Recruitment, who is MIT '00:

http://www.mitadmissions.org/topics/...bout_402.shtml

Excerpt:

Quote:
Originally Posted by Matt McGann

People make a big deal about test scores. No one seems to believe me when I tell them that when I'm reading an application, I just glance at the test scores to get a sense of them before moving on to the more important parts of the application -- that is, who you are. But here's an example. So, I'm reading this application of a student, a pretty strong student, who's definitely overcome some challenges recently. I come to the second to last piece in the folder, which is the guidance counselor letter (the last piece is the interview report). The GC makes a big deal of the student's "scoring the magic 1600 on the SAT." Now, when I started the case, I mentally noted to myself, "Okay, this student has scores that are fine, let's move on," but it didn't really make an impact on me that the student had "the magic 1600." Yes, scoring a 1600 is something that you, your school, your parents, and your guidance counselor can be very proud of. But it's not something I'm going to bust out my highlighter for, circle in big red pen, make it the focus of your case. In fact, I don't think I have ever in my summary of a student used high standardized scores as an argument to admit that student.

...

We want people who are academically curious and passionate, people who will bring their various talents to MIT and share them with others, people who will be good roommates, good mentors, good friends. We do not admit test scores. We admit people.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Chris is me View Post
My personal, non MIT opinion on what will be the inevitable GPA questions: Do you really want to go to a college that throw you out because of minute differences and numbers and grades that are based on arbitrary scales with no standard that are decided entirely by your teacher's and institution? Be a genuinely interesting person and I bet they won't care that your 3.75 isn't a 4.0.
Hi Chris -

We don't throw students out because of minute differences. In fact, we're one of the few highly selective colleges that don't convert all of our incoming applicant's GPA to the 10.0 Exeter/Andover grading system. Many schools will just take whatever you got and convert it to that, find the top students, and go from there.

We don't do that, certainly not with grades - see my post above about our models. Once you're academically qualified for MIT, we look at everything else.

I spent about 45 minutes on your application. I read your essays. I look up where you're from to get a sense of your community (urban or rural? census data? affluent or poor? what was your world like)? I read your teacher recs, and excerpt them heavily, so that I know what the people who interact with you every day think of you. I look at your interview to see what someone from the MIT community thinks about a conversation with you as a person. I really try my hardest to get a sense of who you are and why you do what you do.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Chris is me
Here's my question about MIT: One of the big things that was told to me about MIT was their suicide rate. Is this a really big deal? What resources are there on campus for students who find themselves in these situations?
Matt addressed this recently on the website:

http://www.mitadmissions.org/topics/...ult_subj.shtml

Quote:
Originally Posted by Matt McGann

Every so often, during the Q&A portion of an MIT information session, I am asked a question like this: Is it true that MIT has the highest suicide rate? The answer to that question is: No, this is not true; in fact, MIT is better than the national average. However, this is a serious question, and it deserves a longer response.
You should read the entire blog post. Matt put a lot of thought, numbers, and personal stories - he was President of student government when a highly publicized suicide occurred ten years ago - into it.


Quote:
Originally Posted by Zholl View Post
this hadn't even occurred to me. I'm still in that spot where I'm trying to figure out where I'd like to go and whether I'd be eligible at a school before spending 50 dollars to send in an application, and it'd be good to know whether my academic qualifications would be unacceptable. the way the counselors talk doesn't help this much, either

I'll definitely have to keep this more towards the front of my mind moving forward
Zholl -

The most important thing for your college search process, bar none, should be match. Go visit a bunch of schools and see if you feel like you're home when you're on campus. If you figure that out, everything else - finances, academics, etc - will fall into place.

As for academic qualifications, you can see our data set: http://www.mitadmissions.org/topics/...cs/index.shtml

For personal qualifications - as much as they can be abstracted on a website, which is not very - you can see this: http://www.mitadmissions.org/topics/...le/index.shtml
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Team 1073 alumnus, now Admissions Officer at MIT.

Thanks to all those who have helped me through FIRST over the years.
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