Wednesday, August 12, 2020

Blogger Decisions Released

Blogger Decisions Released So we were a little more efficient this year in making decisions (i.e. none of this October business from last year!). Ive spent a ton of time over the last week reading blogs, blogs, and more blogs. No exaggeration: you guys are amazing. Every year when the call for new bloggers goes out, I am reminded of both the breadth and the depth of MIT students and of each unique MIT experience. Not to sound cheesy, but you guys are doing not only education, but life right and you should be really proud of that. Of course, all of the aforementioned makes blogger selection super difficult. The BSC, or Blogger Selection Committee (i.e. Matt, me, one senior and two blogger alums) met earlier today and had to deliberate for hours before reaching final decisions. In the end, we reached consensus without having to actually vote, which was a really nice conclusion to the selection process. As with MIT admissions, I always leave selection committee feeling great about the successful applicants and miserable about all of the amazing applicants to whom we were unable to offer spots. To those of you in the latter camp: we really loved reading your applications and blogs, and we thank you so much for applying. Please remember that its really not personal if you werent selected we had an 11% admit rate for blogging this year which is more competitive than MIT itself and there are many other factors that we consider, including overlap with current bloggers of class year, residence, and activities. With the sad stuff out of the way, lets focus on the positive and introduce our new bloggers. In alphabetical order: Paul Baranay 11 lives in Simmons, and 20 is currently the front-runner for his major. Hes excited to find a UROP, join Assassins Guild, rock Mystery Hunt, try out for varsity fencing, take his friends money in HoldEm, pursue training as both an EMT and a Medlink, and convince you to watch Notre Dame football with him on Saturdays. Derrick Boone 08 lives in MacGregor and is majoring in 10B and 8. His activities include Navy ROTC (hes operations officer, responsible for planning all Boston ROTC events for 100+ midshipmen), a UROP at the Plasma Science and Fusion Center, MacGregor House Government, and the National Society of Black Engineers. Derrick, who will be applying to grad schools this year, looks forward to going through the application process with this years MIT hopefuls. Karen Figueroa 11 lives in Senior House and plans to major in 11 (she writes, I know that my major is the same as Anthonys, but I wont be studying trains, or transportation at all. Ill be focusing more on international work and developing countries). Karen plans to join a variety of organizations related to international culture and issues (including Model UN, the Association of Taiwanese Students, MIT International Review, Societo Por Esperanto, and the Arab Students Organization) and focus part of her blogging on the work that MIT is doing globally. Chris Su 11 lives in MITs newest living-learning community, iHouse, and is trying to decide between 5, 7, and 20. Hes going to do Mission 2011 this year (which means that he gets to go to Iceland over spring break!) and he hopes to get involved in a variety of public service and volunteering activities at MIT. Although Chris is technically a US citizen, he has lived in Taiwan for most of his life, so hell be an especially great resource for those students applying to MIT from outside of the US. Congrats to all four of you! Ill be in touch soon to get you up and running. (A bunch of 11s have written to me advocating for Snively so I should address that here. Yes, we get it we love Snively too. But unfortunately, Snively lives in Burton-Conner with Laura, Jess, and Evan. A long time ago when we were first creating the admissions blogging program, we made a rule that no more than three bloggers could live in the same dorm, regardless of the consequences. We debated this rule again today for quite some time and came to the conclusion that to break it, even once, would be a slippery slope. We have to protect the integrity of the program at all costs, even if it means passing on some incredible bloggers. Youll recall that we extended an offer to Evan last year but made him wait until Sam and Mitra had graduated weve extended the same offer to Snively. Well hire him when someone moves out of BC or when Laura graduates whichever comes first. :-) Ive blabbed enough. Once again, thanks so much to everyone who applied, and keep blogging!

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