Blog

An Unexpected Mentor

An Unexpected Mentor

The value of informal networking and human connections

April 2, 2017 | Bianca D.

“You win some, you lose some. Well… you lose most,” Sunny said, reacting to our latest unsuccessful experiment. We frown at the lab bench briefly before laughing at the silliness of the situation. Sunny shrugs, standing by his statement and commenting on the nature of grad school as he reminds me that we put in […]

The Infinite Corridor

The Infinite Corridor

How the design of MIT represents its philosophy

April 1, 2017 | Dishita T.

“How do I get to MIT?” I asked. It was a sunny afternoon with a crisp fall breeze. I was only 2 weeks into my first trip to the US, but I was already missing the warmth of Mumbai air. “Well, you are already at MIT,” the lady standing near a white sculpture of human […]

Confronting AlphaGo

Confronting AlphaGo

The value of human teachers in the age of machines

March 31, 2017 | Lee W.

In March 2016, world champion Go player Lee Sedol was defeated by the computer program AlphaGo in a five-game match. As someone who doesn’t play Go, follow professional Go, or study computer science, this shouldn’t have been a big deal to me. But it was. Go is incredibly complex: if every atom in our universe […]

Communicating Science

Communicating Science

I believe it is not enough to do science. We must also communicate it and defend it.

March 30, 2017 | Jared K.

Survival of the fittest. A succinct, elegant tenant of life—and perhaps the most famous words to be uttered in all biology. Uttered by whom, though? You might be surprised to learn it wasn’t Charles Darwin. It was Herbert Spencer, an English philosopher, sociologist, and political theorist. Spencer “lifted” survival of the fittest out of Darwin’s Origin […]

Returning to MIT

Returning to MIT

Choosing to attend graduate school at my undergraduate institution

March 29, 2017 | Katherine S.

I came back to MIT as a graduate student more in spite of my time as an undergraduate here than because of it. And I’m so glad that I did. Now, don’t get me wrong. My hesitation wasn’t because my undergraduate experience wasn’t amazing. It was. I loved my first time at MIT, and would […]