Are you a Match?

<p>START</p>

<p>SCORE=0</p>

<p>If you think that your EC's, Essays, Recs portray anyone of these points then</p>

<p>SCORE = SCORE + 1.</p>

<p>
[quote]

# Alignment with MIT's mission to make the world a better place. Remember that there are many ways to make the world better - we're not looking for applicants to have cured all infectious disease in the world by the time they're fifteen. Tutoring a single kid in math changes the world. Lobbying a senator to change bad policy changes the world. There are thousands of examples.
# Collaborative & cooperative spirit. The core of the MIT spirit is collaboration and cooperation: you can see it all over the Institute. Many of the problem sets (our affectionate term for homework) at MIT are designed to be worked on in groups; cross-department labs are very common; MIT is known for its interdisciplinary research; the Open Source movement is powerful here; publishing and sharing of results is the center of academic research. Fostering a collaborative environment is an important part of the MIT community. If you enjoy working alone all the time, that's fine! But you're probably not going to be particularly happy here.
# Initiative. Research projects and seed money and interesting lectures aren't simply handed to students on silver platters here. Opportunities abound at MIT, but they must be seized. For those students who take initiative - who take advantage of what's around them - MIT's resources are unparalleled.
# Risk-taking. From the Dean herself: "MIT wants to admit people who are not only planning to succeed, but who are not afraid to fail. When people take risks in life, they learn resilience as a result - because risk leads to failure as often as it leads to success. The most creative and successful people - and MIT is loaded with them - know that failure is part of life and that if you stay focused and don't give up, goals are ultimately realized."
# Hands-on creativity. MIT is an active, hands-on place. Innovation is risky and messy! Getting your hands dirty and trying something new is often the best way to achieve success. We apply theoretical knowledge to real-world problems here; our latin motto means "Mind and Hand." In other words, you shouldn't just enjoy thinking, you should also enjoy doing.
# Intensity, curiosity, and excitement. (We used to summarize this as simply "passion" before various components of the college admissions machine turned it into a buzz-word and stripped it of its meaning.) In a nutshell: you should be invested in the things that really mean something to you (we're not particularly picky as to what). Explore! Choose quality over quantity - you don't have to do a million things to get into college. Put your heart into a few things that you truly care about and that will be enough.
# The character of the MIT community. Our community is comprised of good people. People who take care of each other and lift each other up. People who inspire each other to work & dream beyond their potential. We're looking to admit people who by nature will sustain the qualities of this community.
# The ability to prioritize balance. Work hard, play hard. Despite what you may have heard, this place is NOT all about work. To be successful here, you must prioritize some measure of down-time. Therefore we like to see that you've prioritized some down-time in high school as well. Question #3a (Tell us about something you do simply for the pleasure of it) is not a trick question. Answer it wisely.

[/quote]

Be Honest- Increase your score iff your EC's, Recs, Essays highlights these points.</p>

<p>END</p>

<p>My Score= 5/8</p>

<p>8/8, it would be 9/9 if modest was another point</p>

<p>6/8</p>

<p>im not hands on and don't especially like working in groups</p>

<p>7 or 8 out of 8, becoz im not sure abt the rist taking part.....</p>

<p>7/8</p>

<p>I can't prioritize "downtime" and I haven't had fun for at least a month. (I plan to work on this in college.)</p>

<p>6.5/8</p>

<p>I haven't so far in my life risked enough to experience real failure, and I'm not sure how much initiative I've taken in the grand scheme of things, though I know there's some.</p>

<p>7/8 Playing hard has fallen by the wayside in the past few months, but I look forward to resuming it now that apps are in XD</p>

<p>8/8. I'm serious. I feel happy now. :) </p>

<p>Me wants to goes to teh MIT.</p>

<p>
[quote]

I haven't so far in my life risked enough to experience real failure

[/quote]

I think this is the one a lot of high-achieving high school students haven't really experienced yet, and that's understandable -- there's not a lot of risk that's even possible in a typical public high school, and not enough difficulty to really experience failure.</p>

<p>You just have to know yourself to know how you'll deal with failure -- you really shouldn't come to MIT (or major in science, math, or engineering) if you'll let one bad grade or one bad class permanently eat you. It's really tough to deal when you've never experienced failure (a major reason first term at MIT is pass-no record), but to be a scientist or engineer, you have to be able to bounce back from it.</p>

<p>Still, this is definitely an attribute of myself that wasn't well-developed when I came to MIT -- I definitely cried my way from an A- to an A a few times in high school :) -- it's something that can be acquired. You have to have some baseline ability to deal with failure, but it's a feedback process.</p>

<p>This makes me feel good- i have few massive failures to boast about.
I believe MIT is looking for ppl with an ability to cope up with failures.</p>

<p>Mollie is right, here in IIT(Indian Institute of Technology) we have 20-25 suicide cases ever year. Reason? Most of the IITians have never experienced failure in their life- straight toppers in High School- They aren't able to cope up with bad grades and hence suicide.</p>

<p>I'm not a match!!! :-(
<a href="http://hcpc.uth.tmc.edu/pihome/images/match.jpg%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://hcpc.uth.tmc.edu/pihome/images/match.jpg&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>I'm a real boy!</p>

<p>^^that was funny</p>