Wednesday, August 19, 2020
The good advice
The good advice So in case anybodys unaware, I finished my project at the lab at the end of July so I could spend the month of August working on Bens couch. True story. Im going through and tagging all of the bloggers entries with subjects so that people can easily find blog entries on certain topics when Ben opens up the super new site. Sidenote: You, too, should go back and read all of the old entries. Theres some good stuff in the archives, plus it would probably save you the trouble of asking poor Matt some question thats already been answered twenty zillion times. And dont be a wuss and say But there are fourteen hundred entrieeeees in the archives! Boo hoo. Ive read and tagged them all in four days. Dont be a weenie. So since some of the categories dont have many entries at the moment, I am dedicating myself to writing entries on a couple of under-discussed topics. Hence, today: Undergraduate Advising at MIT. Freshman advising Freshman advising is separate from upperclassman advising; upperclassmen are advised by faculty members in their declared department, but freshmen are all officially undeclared until the end of the year. Freshmen have a variety of advising choices: Traditional advising. In traditional advising, the freshman is assigned to an MIT faculty member or staffperson, who holds meetings on or near registration day to discuss potential classes with the student and sign the students registration card. A traditional advisor is also available for one-on-one meetings any time during the year. Seminar advising. A freshman seminar is a weekly class which students attend; theyre on a wide variety of topics (friends of mine have explored Bostons museums, discussed the ethical implications of the Human Genome Project, and built personal electronic devices in their seminars) and are open only to freshmen. The seminars offered this year are here and here. Seminars have very few students, so freshmen get a lot of one-on-one attention from their advisors, who are MIT faculty or staffpersons. Residence-based advising. In RBA, students are advised and placed in seminars based on the dorms in which they choose to live. RBA is available only in Next House and McCormick Hall. Theres no one best advising choice for every incoming freshman. Freshman seminars are usually quite enjoyable (and no, they dont take up a lot of time but you do get 6 units of academic credit for them!), but not everybody wants to add a seminar to his or her schedule. Personally, I did traditional advising, and I turned out just fine. In a more practical sense, freshman advisors are great for advice on careers and that sort of thing, but most MIT students rely more on the upperclassmen with whom they live to give advice on which classes to take. This works out pretty well, since most MIT students spend freshman year taking the General Institute Requirements and perhaps the introductory class(es) in their majors, so upperclassmen are really experts on which courses are best. Plus, its easier to get advice from an upperclassman next door than an advisor all the way across campus, especially at 2 AM. All types of freshman advising, I ought to mention, are copious sources of free food. Advising for upperclassmen All upperclassmen are advised by a professor in their major department. (Im not sure who advises students who remain undecided after freshman year.) Some departments assign students to their advisors, some allow students to pick their own advisors, and some take into account a combination of student preference and advisor availability. In Brain and Cognitive Sciences, I was allowed to list four or five professors as potential advisors, and the final decision was made by Jason, the (awesome) undergraduate administrator, probably based on how many other advisees each of my choices already had. In Biology, I just picked my UROP supervisor as my advisor. (Yeah multiple birds with minimal stones.) In case its not obvious by what I just said, students who declare two majors get two advisors. Double the fun for everyone and double the number of people who can sign your papers! Different departments have different policies on the advisor/advisee relationship. Some departments only require that advisors meet with students on Registration Day, but others require that the advisors and advisees meet at other times too. (My Biology advisor, for example, was required to meet with me on Registration Day to discuss my plans for the term and during the week before Drop Date to discuss how well those plans were working for me.) Of course, youre welcome to drop in on your advisor at any time to discuss classes, grad school/employment plans, or just life in general. Sometimes you have to make an appointment. Some people have a great relationship with their advisors, and some only see their advisors when they need something signed. I was very close with my biology advisor, since I worked in his lab for three years and could drop into his office any time I had a stupid grad school freakout question, but I only ever saw my other advisor on Registration Day. Adam is best buddies with his advisor (they fly remote controlled airplanes together), and is even still close with his ex-advisor, who had to move south for health reasons Adams going down to Georgia in a few weeks to help him with an experiment. Adam and I also both have trusted professor friends who arent our advisors. As with freshman advising, upperclassmen are still often the best resource when deciding which classes to take professors are great with the life advice and all, but sometimes theyre not exactly with it on the classes needed to get there. Students who are interested in medical school, law school, or dental school are also assigned a preprofessional advisor through the MIT Careers Office; this advisor offers guidance for class selection and the professional school application process specifically. Questions 1. Anonymous asked, Is it recommended for biology/premed students to use the ap credit for 7.01x or take the class to have more of a solid foundation? If we use the credit, what upper level biology class should we take? Its really a personal choice whether to use the AP credit for biology or not to do so. Particularly, you should check the requirements of any medical schools to which you plan to apply many wont accept AP credit, but require that premed classes be taken at a university. Personally, Im glad I took into biology at MIT, because I learned the way that professors tend to ask problem set and test questions without having to deal with new material at the same time. If you choose to take AP credit, typically you wouldnt take any upper-level biology course in your freshman year; youd take 5.12 (organic chemistry) in the spring to prepare for 5.13 (organic chemistry II) in your sophomore fall. You could also take 18.03 (differential equations), which is required by some medical schools. The first upper-division biology class students take is usually 7.03 (genetics), which is generally taken during fall of the sophomore year. 2. Hattie asked, Im pondering whether I should apply to MIT early or not. Ive heard that people who are accepted early are exceptionals (like winners of international math/science competitions, etc), so Im not sure if an average person like me should apply early. Do you know what a normal early-admitted person is like? Thanks! Honestly, if you have your application done by the EA deadline, you might as well send it in. Youll never be at a disadvantage applying EA youre not, after all, being compared to all the other applicants, just to yourself and your opportunities, so it shouldnt matter whether the applicant pool is stronger during EA or RD. I obviously dont have any sort of systematic data, but my friends who were admitted EA dont seem to be stronger students in general than my friends who were admitted RD. :) 3. Ying Wei wrote, i wonder that if i manage to get into MIT one day, do u mind me paying u a visit? I love visitors! (And I should note, for the 10s among you, that I plan to have fresh cookies, and possibly pie, during Orientation. Not that Im trying to bribe you to visit me or anything.) 4. Matthew asked, You mentioned one of Adams supervisor asked him to work on a project for his Aero/Astro masters degree? Whats the project? Oh lord, Im going to make an idiot out of myself trying to explain this. So Adam works with UAVs (unmanned aerial vehicles) right now, and his group is transitioning from using large UAVs which can only track objects using GPS to using small UAVs which can track objects using a different system (he says its similar to the motion-capture system that they used to animate Gollum in the Lord of the Rings?). The big advantage of the smaller UAVs is that they can be flight-tested indoors its tough to get good outdoor flying weather in New England on a consistent basis. The motion-capture system is absurdly expensive, but Boeing is footing the bill. ;) He has a video of his prototype plane-tracking thingy in his Athena locker, which I will link to after I find it. The eventual goal is to track objects better than theyre tracked right now, and presumably with the intent to blow things up, et cetera. (Thats usually the goal in applied aerospace research.) 5. Joe asked, If one is accepted to any dorm, each floor is said to have its own culture. Can you kind of give an overview of that in MacGregor? Thanks! Congrats on the engagement :) I think if I try to stereotype, Im just going to get myself in trouble, so Ill merely say that yes, the entries in MacGregor are pretty different, and hopefully everyone whos interested in MacGregor will explore the different entries both before and during in-house rush. Im hesitant to stereotype, because a) stereotypes are inevitably too broad, and b) entry culture can often change dramatically over a year or two, so anything I say might not be accurate for this year. 6. Andrew asked, I was just perusing some Macgregor related sites and found some conflicting information. You said that all the entries are co-ed, but on the F-entry homepage, it says that they are all-male (perhaps this is just old, and hasnt been updated recently). So, whats the truth? Keris right F-Entry just went coed last school year (2005-2006). They probably just havent updated their webpage yet.
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