<p>Okay, I'm going to be upfront with you. I'm more of a humanities girl than a science one, and I'm pretty much set on attending undergraduate business school. Enter MIT, which has a top undergrad B-school. Should I be scared from it due to the general reqs of MIT (something like 4 credits of science, per science), or would it make a science-lover out of me?</p>
<p>Or should I just resign myself to knowing MIT wouldn't want me anyway? :-)</p>
<p>Well, it's not quite that much science -- at the moment, the requirements are seventeen courses, of which eight are humanities classes.</p>
<p>You do have to be able to survive those science classes, and the management major at MIT includes some not-cakewalky classes (in particular, 6.041, which is a probability and statistics course for EECS majors). They also have to take a programming class and linear algebra. (Degree chart here</a>.)</p>
<p>To me, it's not so much a question of liking the science and math as it is being able to handle it. I mean, I really don't like physics, but I busted my hump through the two physics classes required by the GIRs, even though I wouldn't have voluntarily taken them.</p>
<p>I like geometry myself, as in this quip from Theodore Roethke's "I Knew a Woman":</p>
<p>Love likes a gander, and adores a goose:
Her full lips pursed, the errant notes to sieze;
She played it quick, she played it light and loose;
My eyes, they dazzled at her flowing knees;
Her several parts could keep a pure repose,
Or one hip quiver with a mobile nose
(She moved in circles, and those circles moved). </p>