<p>1) I don’t know these answers off-hand, but you could easily find it by googling. US News report has SAT 25%-75% ranges for sure.</p>
<p>2) MIT doesn’t admit by major or to school (engineering vs. business,) so you won’t find statistics for engineering majors only.</p>
<p>3) International students are admitted separately from U.S. citizens/permanent residents, and the standards are different. I am not aware of any GPA or test statistics for international students. Expect that the standards in these areas will be above that for domestic students, though.</p>
<p>For MIT, there’s a range for grades and SATs scores because they want diversity. In general, your GPA should be at least a 3.5 (unweighted and assuming you are taking the highest available courses at your school) and you need at least a 730 in math. If you look on their website, the average student has a higher GPA and SAT score but having these grades/scores won’t disqualify you as a viable candidate to MIT.</p>
<p>Obviously straight A’s and a 2300+ SAT score would be ideal but even with these numbers you need something else to set you apart. You need to excel at something else besides school work (i.e. music). People tend to talk a lot about how many extracurricular activities they do but it’s more important that the students excel at certain extracurriculars (i.e. for music, doing district, all-state, all-eastern, all-national music festivals, being principal players or concertmasters, winning concerto-competitions, etc). Also, there is a high correlation of students who participated in FIRST Robotics teams who got into MIT. If you want to major in engineering, you should know why you want to do so – what hands-on experience have you had to inclines you to this major?</p>