Blog

You Can’t Run Before You Walk

You Can’t Run Before You Walk

Navigating the initial stressful months at MIT

April 1, 2019 | Shashank A.

After completing my undergraduate studies in 2014, I began a slow-paced government job in India. As part of the job, I got a chance to explore the depth and widths of the country, with temperatures ranging from -10oC to 50oC. Overall it was an enriching experience, it taught me a lot about the practical aspects […]

Weighted Decision Matrices and the Happiness Question

Weighted Decision Matrices and the Happiness Question

How I decided to come to MIT

March 18, 2019 | Mary T.

Deciding to pursue a Ph.D. and finding appropriate programs was straightforward for me; choosing where to go was much more tortuous. Even before I had received any acceptance letters, I fretted over the question: “How will I choose?”. Should I choose the most prestigious school? The cheapest city, so my stipend will go further? A […]

A Perfect Campus Tour

A Perfect Campus Tour

See most of MIT in 30 minutes

March 11, 2019 | Shashank A.

I have been at MIT for almost two and a half years, and during this time I have repeatedly been asked to give campus tours to visiting friends and family. Though most of campus is within walking distance, extremely convoluted paths resulting from high building density and weird building numbering make it challenging to navigate […]

Finding Belonging through Community

Finding Belonging through Community

Make the time to seek out familiar spaces

November 13, 2018 | Vadim K.

There’s a common feeling that many incoming graduate students can attest to: I don’t belong here. MIT seems designed to keep us feeling this way, perhaps as motivation to work long hours, or perhaps to perpetuate its imposing reputation. It starts from the moment of acceptance. Elation and surprise are quickly followed by weeks of […]

Undercover Art

Undercover Art

Discovering the (not so) hidden artsy side of MIT

March 15, 2018 | Zoë L.

Before coming to MIT, I had this idea in my head that it was a super tech focused, STEM-driven institution. And it is, in many ways. But thinking of it that way scared me a little, because despite being a physics major in undergrad and a mechanical engineering major now that I’m in graduate school, […]