
Extracurriculars MIT Looks For & How They're Evaluated
Cambridge, Massachusetts · Private

Aman D.
Former MIT Admissions Officer
There are only four activity slots. Every one has to do real work: what you built, what you won, what you led. There's no room for filler.
We definitely have normalized that every kid I have who goes to a top 20 university today has done some kind of research program, or research project. Is research a necessary part of the admissions process these days? For kids who are trying to be competitive, the answer would be yes.

Aman D.
Former MIT Admissions Officer
Big Prizes
A handful of competitions matter more than the rest, most admitted students arrive with at least one
Selective Summer Programs
Some summer programs are so hard to get into that the acceptance itself is the achievement.
Original Research
Original research has become close to expected for competitive MIT applicants.
Maker Instinct
Showcase self-built projects through MIT's Maker Portfolio, reviewed during admissions.
He still showed sort of a science-y mindset. Some people are just totally not overtly STEM, but it still reveals whether he thinks like a scientist.

Aman D.
Former MIT Admissions Officer
Achievement is diverse. As much as we talk about achievements being like IMO prize, this prize, that prize, you can also have achievements such as ‘I got 500 dogs adopted for an animal shelter, or ‘I raised $100,000 for a charity for blind people’. There's tons of ways to have other achievements.

Aman D.
Former MIT Admissions Officer
If an activity wouldn't survive as one of your top four, it almost certainly shouldn't be on your MIT application at all.
Submit a Maker Portfolio if
A strong portfolio shows substantial independent work and provides evidence of exceptional skill.
Skip the Maker Portfolio if
The work stems from classwork, lacks initiative or documentation, and may reflect poor judgment.
We talked about stariness — like, how many stars, what are the star accomplishments that people have.

Aman D.
Former MIT Admissions Officer
“Stariness” is MIT shorthand for the accomplishments visible before a reader opens the file. Prize-level results register instantly. Strong applicants without a prize at this level need the rest of their file to do the work.
You really feel satisfied. You closed the file and you're like, oh, it made sense.

Aman D.
Former MIT Admissions Officer
A four-slot application is small enough that everything in it can be cross-checked against everything else. Inconsistencies show up faster at MIT than at schools where readers have ten activities to review.
Olympiad, research, computing
Computational biology, Conservation, & Music
Biophysics, Origami, & Ethics
Rocketry, Linguistics, & Engineering
Robotics, Environmental Justice, & Civic Leadership
Debate, Journalism, Policy
At MIT, the tier that matters most is Tier 1. Unlike other top schools where a coherent Tier 2 profile can get you admitted, MIT admits overwhelmingly include at least one Tier 1 accomplishment, usually a prize or a selective summer program.
If you don't have an overt prize, community impact is one of the few ways in which you can really influence an admissions officer's read of you.

Aman D.
Former MIT Admissions Officer
