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Are You Smart Enough to Be at MIT?

Are You Smart Enough to Be at MIT?

Attacking the smart versus non-smart cliché

October 26, 2018 | Rajat T.

The Letter: It is mid-April. You receive an email from the MIT graduate office congratulating you on your admission to MIT. You are overjoyed. You tell your family and friends about it. A few days pass by. The news sinks in, and a cloud of doubts appears as you browse through the MIT webpages, the […]

The Wonderful World of Procrasti-Baking

The Wonderful World of Procrasti-Baking

How I manage grad school stress in the kitchen

October 22, 2018 | Ally H.

You have spent days – maybe even weeks – planning the perfect experiment. You have gathered all the materials you need, written down the protocol in your lab notebook, and made sure all the necessary equipment is available. Line by line, you perform the protocol with precision and manage to get through it without any […]

The Risks of Speaking Up

The Risks of Speaking Up

How to win a speech competition by going meta

October 22, 2018 | Anna I.

Ping – a new email in my inbox. It was a reminder that I had signed up for the “MIT Can Talk” Oratory Competition, taking place tomorrow. The email window stayed open for a while, waiting patiently while I was deciding whether I still wanted to participate. I had just submitted a paper for a […]

Inaccurate Prior Probabilities

Inaccurate Prior Probabilities

Moving to a new city and worrying about the future

April 4, 2018 | Conner K.

The day after I committed to MIT for my PhD, a wave of panic set over me. I felt like I was about to repeat a disaster. I’d tried moving to a new city before and things hadn’t worked out well, yet here I was doing it all over again. I’ve been a west coaster […]

According to Plan

According to Plan

How facing and conquering obstacles makes us better scientists

April 4, 2018 | Olivia F.

Many people I talk to at MIT have high expectations for their first year. They’ll ace their classes, breeze through teaching, and have two publications by the time they are a second-year student. A sixth-year student I met, however, summed up reality: “If there’s one thing I learned in grad school, it’s that things never […]