@@IvyAdmissionHelp Sorry - couldn't find it. I found this: "All undergraduate students enter MIT undeclared and students are not admitted directly to MIT Sloan. Therefore, please visit the Admissions Office home page to apply to MIT. All MIT undergraduates can take classes at MIT Sloan beginning their first semester; students select a major at the end of their first year." But that doesn't mean there's delayed admission - it just means there's no separate admission to Sloan. And based on what I've found elsewhere (e.g., on Quora), anyone can declare Course 15 (Sloan) as their major when the time comes. If you have clear support for saying there's delayed admission (i.e., a second, later admission process, like UVA has), can you please provide a link? My son plans to apply to MIT next year, so we'd like to know (with certainty) whether there's delayed admission to Sloan. Thanks!
Correct, there's no secondary application process. Once you finish your freshman year at MIT, as long as you are in good standing, you can simply declare one of the Sloan business fields as your major. By delayed admission, I mean that you are not directly admitted into the business program straight out of high school, as is the case at many schools.
Excellent advice
One for engineering and film pleaseeee!!!
Have you looked into UCLA or USC? Both would be excellent for engineering and film.
Excellent video
Thank you very much!
I didn't find anything on MIT's website saying that Sloan is delayed admission. Are you sure that's correct?
Yes. Make sure you look up Sloan for undergraduates as opposed to the Sloan MBA program.
@@IvyAdmissionHelp Sorry - couldn't find it. I found this: "All undergraduate students enter MIT undeclared and students are not admitted directly to MIT Sloan. Therefore, please visit the Admissions Office home page to apply to MIT. All MIT undergraduates can take classes at MIT Sloan beginning their first semester; students select a major at the end of their first year." But that doesn't mean there's delayed admission - it just means there's no separate admission to Sloan. And based on what I've found elsewhere (e.g., on Quora), anyone can declare Course 15 (Sloan) as their major when the time comes. If you have clear support for saying there's delayed admission (i.e., a second, later admission process, like UVA has), can you please provide a link? My son plans to apply to MIT next year, so we'd like to know (with certainty) whether there's delayed admission to Sloan. Thanks!
Correct, there's no secondary application process. Once you finish your freshman year at MIT, as long as you are in good standing, you can simply declare one of the Sloan business fields as your major. By delayed admission, I mean that you are not directly admitted into the business program straight out of high school, as is the case at many schools.