Blog

Launching into the new year

Launching into the new year

Experiencing my first rocket launch

April 15, 2021 | Daniel J.

Though I’ve been called a space nerd and a rocket scientist before, I’ve never felt that I never really earned that title. After all, I’ve never witnessed a live rocket launch before—that is until this past MIT’s Independent Activities Period (IAP) in January 2020.  After finishing my first term as a Ph.D student at MIT, […]

Mayan, what else?

Mayan, what else?

Take the time to breathe and do what you like

April 15, 2021 | Grégoire J.

I was tired. My first semester at MIT was tougher than I had expected. I still have vivid memories of that defining evening of November. I was making my way back home with research ideas spinning in my head and started to feel anxious about the three p-sets I had to finish by week’s end. […]

Hunting for what we lost

Hunting for what we lost

How the MIT Mystery Hunt Reminded Me Of How Bleak Pandemic Life Is

April 15, 2021 | Mary D.

It is a unique feeling to be having such a fantastic time that you make yourself hopelessly, achingly sad.  During the Independent Activities Period (IAP) this past January, the annual MIT Mystery Hunt took place, and I competed with my undergraduate team, NES*. For those that don’t know, the MIT Mystery Hunt is a puzzle […]

When is the best time to start graduate school?

When is the best time to start graduate school?

Pros and cons of fresh-out-of-undergraduate and post-young professional paths

April 15, 2021 | Jessica W.

I’ve technically had two “first days” of graduate school. The first one was in September 2012. Fresh out of undergraduate, I arrived that fall semester at MIT – completely burned out. After graduate school applications and a grueling final senior semester, I was running on fumes. I joined a lab that semester in a field […]

Pandemic pupils

Pandemic pupils

How Covid-19 has transformed my perspective on outreach and education

April 15, 2021 | Arianna K.

Going to graduate school anywhere can be a form of culture shock. Often, the transition is from cosmopolitan to erudite and razor-focused, or team-based and casual to more isolated. But moving to do graduate school in a northeastern city in the U.S. from somewhere more rural, such as southwestern Virginia (where I came from), can […]