Admissions
Online Subject Listings & Schedule
Course Catalogue (printed)
Academic Calendar
WebSIS
Departmental Degree Programs
Academic Programs
Secondary School Programs
Professional Programs
Course Materials on the WWW
Independent Activities Period (IAP)
Commencement 1999
Departmental Degree Programs
Most departments at MIT are numbered. These 'course numbers' are used to indicate which classes are taught by which departments.
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School of Architecture and Planning
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School of Engineering
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School of Humanities and Social Science
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Sloan School of Management (Course 15)
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School of Science
- Other Programs
Undergraduate and Graduate Educational Programs
Some of these programs award degrees from the departments listed above. Many are interdepartmental and/or interdisciplinary.
Secondary School Programs (For High School
Students and Younger)
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Educational Studies Program (ESP)
- The Educational Studies Program is a forty-year-old MIT student activity committed to providing opportunities for learning in the greater Boston community.
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Junior Summit
- The Junior Summit is a global movement for young people to change the
future by participating in a six-month online forum, centered around a
week-long international summit. Through the Junior Summit, kids will
become ambassadors of a new digital culture.
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Mesh (Summer Programs for High School Students)
- Mesh is a summer program of the MIT Educational Studies Program. Its purpose is to help students gain a deeper understanding of a subject in an environment that encourages active and creative engagement in scientific disciplines.
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Minority Introduction to Engineering and Science (MITES)
- MITES is a rigorous six week residential summer course designed to introduce promising underrepresented minority high school juniors to careers in engineering and science.
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Research Science Institute
- The Research Science Institute (RSI) is an intensive 6-week-long summer session of lectures, research and discussion for high school students who are especially gifted in the sciences and mathematics. Applications submitted via the Center for Excellence in Education.
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Splash
- Splash is a weekend-long extravaganza of lectures, workshops, and seminars for students in grades seven through twelve.
Professional Programs
- Advanced
Study Program (ASP), part of the Center for Advanced Educational Services (CAES)
- ASP enables working professionals to enroll in graduate-level
MIT courses and programs of study funded by their work organizations.
Since 1963, ASP has served hundreds of Fellows, attending from more
than 72 countries. With the development of distance learning
technologies, ASP was able to extend its offerings to students off
campus in 1995.
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Center for Real Estate Summer Professional Development Courses
- The MIT Center for Real Estate summer institute of professional development courses helps practitioners supplement their knowledge of the field.
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Center for Transportation Studies
- The Center takes part in several executive transportation
courses, including Logistics Analysis for Carriers and Shippers,
Modeling and Simulation for Dynamic Transportation Management Systems,
and Public Transportation Service and Operations Planning.
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Enterprise Forum
- The MIT Enterprise Forum promotes the formation and growth of innovative and technologically-oriented companies through a series of specialized executive education programs.
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Executive Short Courses
- The Sloan School of Management offers seven executive short courses for mid and senior level executives. Most of these programs last one week and are held in the summer.
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Institute for Learning and Teaching
- TILT engages and supports community-based teams of educators from across the United States in a year-long professional development program.
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Knight Science Journalism Fellowship
- The Knight Science Journalism Fellowship program is designed for
journalists and others who cover science, technology, medicine or the
environment for the general public.
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Leaders for Manufacturing Program
- The Leaders for Manufacturing Program is a partnership between MIT and thirteen U.S. manufacturing firms to discover and translate into teaching and practice principles that produce world-class manufacturing and manufacturing leaders.
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Summer Professional Programs and
Winter Professional Programs
- The professors who teach these courses have in many cases pioneered the very theories they teach. The students are your colleagues in business and industry. The curriculum of 60-90 courses is high-level and presented in an intense 1-2 week format, f
or those with little or no time to spare.
The Presidential Task
Force on Student Life and Learning recently undertook a
fundamental, comprehensive review of the Institute's educational
mission on the threshold of the twenty-first century.
Comments to
web-request@mit.edu
$Date: 1999/09/05 23:43:41 $