<p>I am thinking about applying to Sloan. Here are my stats:</p>
<p>Chinese Male
Non-competitive public school in Washington
SAT: 2170 <a href="1%20sitting">760M, 670CR, 740W</a>, 2210 <a href="highest">800M</a>
SAT II: 750 Math IIC, 740 Physics, 790 Math IC, taking biology soon
PSAT: 64 CR, 67 WR, 76 M</p>
<p>3.979 UW GPA
Rank 1/264
5 on AP Calculus AB
4 on AP Physics B</p>
<p>Taking AP Stats, AP Spanish, AP Biology next year
Have taken full load of honors/AP school offers</p>
<p>Work:
Interned at Microsoft in Global Accounts (sales/marketing) 40hrs/10wks during summer
Web developer for non-profit teen job search site
Renton Technical College Newsletter layout design</p>
<p>EC:
President of Senior Class
Regional VP of DECA
VP, Treasurer, Historian of Multicultural Student Association
National Honor Society
Link Crew
Renton Youth Council
Tutored GED students at Renton Technical College one summer
Volunteered at Renton Technical College foundation one summer
Won national 7up web campaign development contest</p>
<p>I am wondering what my chances are at MIT Sloan. I am very interested in their business/technology disciplines, and I am wondering how much my Microsoft internship will help me.</p>
<p>Just curious -- do you know that you should actually be asking for "chances at MIT" because intended major isn't explicitly considered in the admissions process? Future Sloanie or no, you'll be considered in the context of the full applicant pool.</p>
<p>You don't apply to Sloan. You enter MIT with all other freshmen, take the same General Institute Requirements courses (GIRs, the MIT-equivalent of core courses), and then starting as early as spring of your freshman year you declare your major and sign up for courses accordingly. This could be a major in the Sloan School, or something else entirely. You don't apply for your major (with the exception of the new Biological Engineering major which has limited enrollment by application in sophomore year). (Right, mollie?)</p>
<p>Your statistics and activities will likely put you in the competitive pool, after which your chances, like everyone else's chances, are roughly 14 out of 100, if last year's ratios hold.</p>
<p>Yup. (And I think restrictions on BE will likely be eased after they figure out how many people are really interested and how to accomodate them.)</p>
<p>Everyone at MIT who wants to major in management is free to do so, no "application" required.</p>
<p><em>cough</em> wharton no. 1 <em>cough</em> but yea, sloan is up there with stern, tuck, etc. <em>cough</em> not wharton <em>cough</em> lol i'm not even applying there</p>