<p>Hello Everyone ,
My major is computer Science
In order to apply to MIT, can i take physic and math in one semester instead of chemistry and biology ?
Thanks</p>
<p>I really do not understand the question, on a number of different levels.
Firstly, any applicant’s intended major is completely irrelevant. You get accepted to the entire Institute, not to any department, school or program. As such, it has little bearing on anything.
Secondly, people apply to MIT from a wide variety of different types of high schools, and a variety of types of programs. For example in many commonwealth countries, it is expected that a student specialise at 16. So it is rare to find any student applying to MIT from Nigeria, Hong Kong, or the UK (amongst others) who has taken four years of secondary school English. </p>
<p>There are no requirements to apply to MIT. There is a recommended program which will work in a huge majority of American high schools which can be found on the MIT Admissions website as [What</a> To Do In High School |](<a href=“http://mitadmissions.org/apply/prepare/highschool]What”>What to do in high school | MIT Admissions) However, this is a recommendation, rather than a requirement. That being said, if you are applying from a location where this recommended program is an option, and you choose not to do so, then there would ideally be a logical reason as to why you did not.</p>