“Mind and Hand” is the thought-provoking motto of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, known also as MIT. This motto enigmatically encapsulates this famous institution’s mission to advance knowledge in science, technology and areas of scholarship that can help to make the world a better place.
At
its founding in 1861, MIT was initially a small community of problem-solvers
and science lovers eager to bring their knowledge to bear on the world. Today,
MIT has evolved into an educational behemoth, with some 1,000 faculty members
and more than 11,000 undergraduate and graduate students.
MIT
is now an independent, coeducational, privately endowed university organized
into five schools (architecture and planning; engineering; humanities, arts,
and social sciences; management; science). Yet the principle of educational
innovation remains at the core of MIT’s educational philosophy.
MIT
researchers are at the forefront of developments in artificial intelligence,
climate adaptation, HIV, cancer, and poverty alleviation, while in the past MIT
research has fuelled scientific breakthroughs such as the development of radar,
the invention of magnetic core memory and the concept of the expanding
universe.
Science
and technology are not the only strings to MIT’s bow, however. Approximately 20
percent of MIT undergraduates join a sports team, and with 33 varsity sports
MIT boasts one of the broadest intercollegiate athletic programs in the
world.
A
vibrant arts culture also permeates college life. There are 12 museums and
galleries on campus, with the MIT Museum drawing nearly 125,000 visitors each
year. Students participate in more than 60 music, theatre, writing and dance
groups, and faculty members of MIT even include Pulitzer Prize winners and
Guggenheim fellows.
MIT
is set in 168 acres of grounds that extend for more than a mile along the
Cambridge side of the Charles River basin. The campus features stunning
landmarks designed by the likes of architects Alvar Aalto, Frank Gehry, and
Steven Hollin, as well as buildings in a range of architectural styles, from
neoclassical to modernist and brutalist.
At
its edges, the campus merges with various Cambridge neighborhoods, including
Kendall Square which is one of the most innovative square miles on the planet. The
close association of industry and research has helped MIT alumni go on to
launch more than 30,000 active companies, creating 4.6 million jobs and
generating roughly $1.9 trillion in annual revenue. No wonder then that a
nation of MIT graduates would be equivalent to the 10th-largest economy in the
world.
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Education