Blog

L’Autre, c’est moi

L’Autre, c’est moi

Sondering away in the heart of a young boy

August 25, 2020 | Nicolas M.

As a child, I vividly remember staring for hours out the window in the back seat of my parents’ car, scrutinizing nearby people stopped at the red light or passing us on the highway. I’d see a driver singing her favorite tune, a couple absorbed in some deep conversation, or an entire family sitting quietly […]

Am I too busy for radio?

Am I too busy for radio?

How my time spent on-air made me a better scientist

August 11, 2020 | Lama A.

The way I see it, a major part of being an “entitled millennial” is our personal conviction that we all have a message to share and a voice to be heard; its primary symptoms are the oversaturated podcast market and the unlimited supply of Instagram influencers. As a new graduate student at MIT with new […]

The infinite rotation

The infinite rotation

After six failed lab rotations, one last chance to find a home

August 11, 2020 | Matthew A.

Switching labs is, optimally, disruptive. On September 3, 2019, the very beginning of my second year at MIT, my PhD program director called me into his office to explain that I needed to switch labs because one of my co-advisors was a research fellow, not a tenure-track professor, and the other presently lacked resources to […]

Navigating MIT

Navigating MIT

How to Survive in the Forest of Numbers

August 11, 2020 | Hyunjin P.

MIT exemplifies a uniquely analytical and quantitative intellectual approach. It’s a good thing, usually; after all, scientific revolutions like Newtonian physics began when we started putting stuff into quantitative perspective. MIT, however, took it a bit too far.  Humans are, in general, pretty bad at memorizing numbers (with a few exceptions like Akira Haraguch, who […]

Making the switch

Making the switch

My journey of changing labs

July 30, 2020 | Liang L.

A year and a half into my master’s program, I decided to change labs. This may not sound as terrifying, but it means jumping into an ocean of uncertainty. Unlike many PhD programs at MIT, my master’s program doesn’t have the luxury of lab rotations with secure funding from the department. This means that the […]