|
More Frequently Asked Questions
specific to the Graduate Program application process are in our
Application Procedures
section.
- How many women are graduate students in Biology?
- What's it like to be a minority at MIT?
- What's the housing situation?
- Why should I be a teaching assistant if I'm not
interested in a teaching career?
- Unanswered questions? Contact us at gradbio@mit.edu.
1. How many women are graduate
students in Biology?
Women comprise 46% of our graduate students and 20% of our faculty.
If you have specific questions about women's issues at MIT, email
Betsey Walsh at gradbio@mit.edu
and she'll arrange for a woman student in our graduate program to
contact you directly.
2. What's it like to be
a minority graduate student at MIT?
Although under-represented minorities comprise a modest fraction
of our graduate students and faculty, minority students with a wide
range of backgrounds have flourished here. Currently the number of minority graduate students in the Biology program is 10%. If you have specific questions about issues concerning minority students, email Betsey
Walsh at gradbio@mit.edu, and
she'll arrange for a minority graduate student to contact you directly.
Inquiries can also be directed to Roy Charles at rac@mit.edu
in the MIT Graduate
Students Office.
3. What's the housing situation
for graduate students?
On-campus housing options are available for single students, married
students, and full-time couples, with priority given to first-year
students. Many graduate students live off campus, primarily in the
nearby neighborhoods of Cambridge, Boston, Somerville, and Arlington.
The MBTA bus and subway systems make commuting easy. For questions,
contact the Graduate
Housing Office, MIT, E32-133, Cambridge, MA 02139-4307, 617-253-5148,
or email graduatehousing@mit.edu.
4. Why should I be a teaching
assistant if I'm not interested in a teaching career?
Because learning to teach effectively means learning to communicate
effectively, and having superior communication skills is essential
to success in any career. Teaching is one of the best ways to improve
communication and interaction skills. It's also amazingly rewarding
to explain something to a student and see the light go on.
More questions and answers are in the Applications
Procedures section.

|