<p>@joey that was my whole list. </p>
<p>@Sandy Happy belated birthday!! I just noticed that in the comments :)</p>
<p>@joey that was my whole list. </p>
<p>@Sandy Happy belated birthday!! I just noticed that in the comments :)</p>
<p>@ Green15</p>
<p>I did too!</p>
<p>@atari1994 i applied Chemical Engineering (I dunno the course number…I’m a crazy person ) I got accepted yesterday into UT austin’s ChemE program just waiting on MIT to decide where i’m gonna go. What about you?
@ mathbro thanks a lot, how’s everything working out so far?.</p>
<p>@SandyKeen
I couldn’t decide between EECS and mechanical engineering.</p>
<p>Happy belated birthday, by the way.</p>
<p>Two guesses are off. Mine and eigenvector’s are next. May 6th. I REALLY REALLY HOPE ITS MONDAY, not just for the bets but i just can’t wait any longer. lol</p>
<p>Did anyone else apply to 6-3? I can’t be the only one…</p>
<p>18 mathematics here, ready for rejection</p>
<p>@SandyKeen I also got accepted to UT Austin for MechE. Maybe I’ll see you there… or at MIT!! </p>
<p>Good Luck!</p>
<p>@joey 6-3 right here!</p>
<p>hopeforthebest94!! 18 here also! Good luck :)</p>
<p>@ atari1994 thanks.
I wish we could all be admitted because it seems like we all applied to different programs(for the most part)…thats too much to ask i know :-)</p>
<p>Hehehe @mortlogik hopefully we’ll meet in MIT!! Congrats tho UT is equally pretty good.</p>
<p>@moonman676 Woohoo! Go Biological Engineering! As an aspiring biomedical research scientist, I really want to work at the interface between engineering and biology. There really is no better place for cellular-based engineering than at MIT. When I spend my summers in Cambridge with my twin sister, I just marvel at the research being done at the Koch Center, the Whitehead Institute, the Broad…it’s just so exciting!</p>
<p>By the way, is anyone here super excited about research? Though the research I do at my current school is really interesting and translationally relevant, I know for a fact that if we get into MIT, we will definitely have a great opportunity to make a real impact in science even as undergrads. :D</p>
<p>@Green15 Totally agree on the research part!!! Research is fun you are basically free to do anything you want lol</p>
<p>@Green15</p>
<p>I totally agree with you. I’ve visited my extended family in Boston every summer since I was a little kid, and every time I would beg my dad to take me to Cambridge and buy me math and science books from the Harvard Coop (he would if I got good grades that year). I’d wait all year for the few hours when I could run up and down those three floors of amazing books, trying to decide which two books to pick–the limit was at two because they are expensive–and I would enjoy them slowly over the course of that year, until the next year when I could get two more. </p>
<p>I’m completely in love with Boston, and it would be a dream to me if I could study engineering there.</p>
<p>@Green15</p>
<p>I’m also crazy about neuroscience and AI research, forgot to mention that :)</p>
<p>Does anyone know the acceptance rate for transfer students?
Are mostly transferring students for freshman or for sophomore?</p>
<p>@atari1994 That is SO cool! Just thinking about the combination fo Neuroscience and AI research seems incredibly exciting! Wherever you go, whether it is MIT or elsewhere, I hope you can really have a strong scientific impact.</p>
<p>Though I love lab-based biosciences, I have always been an engineering nerd. Back in high school, my team of six fellow students designed a bunch of inventions (including this really cool orientation system for cubic satellites, a lightning predictor/detector, etc.), robots, and research apparatuses that we launched into space and presented at MIT as a Lemelson-MIT InvenTeam, at NASA’s Ames Research and Glen Research centers, and at SpaceX in Florida. </p>
<p>Though my current school is wonderful and has a decent engineering school, I would love to build upon this innovative mindset amongst the best technological and scientific minds in the world! And plus with my sister as an MIT '15, it would feel like home. :)</p>
<p>All the best guys! Whatever happens, let’s continue to push science and engineering forward. Even as simple MIT applicants, that is our obligation.</p>
<p>vivian_</p>
<p>I think all transfer students start out as sophomores at MIT. And the transfer rates can be found here:
[MIT</a> Office of the Provost, Institutional Research](<a href=“MIT Institutional Research”>MIT Institutional Research)
[MIT</a> Office of the Provost, Institutional Research](<a href=“MIT Institutional Research”>MIT Institutional Research)
[MIT</a> Office of the Provost, Institutional Research](<a href=“MIT Institutional Research”>MIT Institutional Research)
[MIT</a> Office of the Provost, Institutional Research](<a href=“MIT Institutional Research”>MIT Institutional Research)
[MIT</a> Office of the Provost, Institutional Research](<a href=“MIT Institutional Research”>MIT Institutional Research)</p>
<p>The acceptance rate of last year is weirdly high… is that a good sign? lol</p>