Friday, August 21, 2020
QA Food on campus, UROPs, decisions
QA Food on campus, UROPs, decisions The four questions Im going to address: 1) It seems like the food availability on campus is a little scarce. Do you have time to cook, even if its just once every two weeks as part of a co-op? Or do most kids just end up eating whatever is quickly made? 2) If you (or anyone you know) has a UROP, does that become your primary extracurricular activity? Or do you have time to pursue other things as well as research? 3) Do you know if [the Koch Cancer center] takes people on for UROPs? 4) If you had to make the choice to go to MIT again, would you? Im a little embarrassed asking this, because work has never scared me off before, but sometimes it seems like MIT students are overwhelmed because the workload is impossible, not simply difficult. QUESTION 1 In my opinion, there are four aspects to eating on campus. 1) dorm dining halls, 2) convenience stores, 3) cooking, 4) eating out THE DORM DINING OPTION Depending on where you live, you either have: 1) A mandatory dining plan (Maseeh, Next, McCormick, Simmons, Baker) 2) The option of signing up for a dining plan (everywhere else) Youre free to eat at any dining hall: the meal plans are not dorm-specific. If, for example, you lived at Simmons, you could eat breakfast there, have lunch somewhere closer to campus (like Baker or Maseeh), and then eat dinner at Next House. Even if youre not on a meal plan, you can still eat at a dining hall: they accept cash and TechCash. From what I hear, the food is pretty decent, but I cant speak from experience. The biggest problem with this option is probably cost, and flexibility: to get what you paid for, youll have to eat a certain number of meals in the dining hall. GROCERY SHOPPING LaVerdes is a supermarket/convenience store on the first floor of the Student Center. It tends to be quite pricey, so most students opt for shopping at Shaws (about a 10-minute walk down Mass Ave from the Student Center) or Trader Joes/Whole Foods (further away, but a shuttle runs on weekends). However, its a good option when you just need to pick up a carton of milk or orange juice and dont feel like trekking all the way off campus. Also, its worth mentioning (although this doesnt have anything to do with food availability on campus) that Shaws gives a discount to MIT students: you get 5% off with your ID. MacGregor (the dorm) also has a convenience store, which sells snack foods and things like ramen and microwaveable meals. And toothbrushes. COOKING Most students who opt out of the dining plan cook for themselves, in some form or another. I live in French House, which has its own system. We cook dinner in teams of four, which means that I cook once a week and have a three- to four-course dinner cooked for me all other nights of the week. Our dinners cost about $3 on average, since we buy everything in bulk (which comes out pretty cheap when scaled for 27 people.) Its a pretty sweet deal and, to be honest, I think that I would have to be on a dining plan otherwise, because I would find it very difficult (and totally exhausting) to cook for myself every night. I had to do that over the summer (when I was living in MacGregor) and got really sick of cereal, peanut butter sandwiches, and pasta*. *As sick as one can get of those things, anyway. Lets be honest: Cheerios, peanut butter, and tomato sauce are all pretty fantastic. I do know some people in non-dining residences who end up ordering out most nights or microwaving frozen meals, but Im not sure I could function like that. I would imagine that some of them set up mini cooking systems. EATING OUT The Student Center has a bunch of food options, like Subway, Dunkin Donuts, Cambridge Grill (salad, hamburgers, pizza, that kind of thing), Annas (Mexican extremely popular with some, extremely unpopular with others), and a couple of fast food Japanese, Mediterranean, and Indian places. If youre coming from class at the other end of the Infinite, the Stata Center has a big cafeteria that I like quite a lot, as does the Whitehead Institute. Most of these places (in fact, all of them, as far as I know) also have options for breakfast and dinner. People also venture off-campus, to Central and Kendall Square (though this takes longer) or to the food trucks, which park near Kendall. QUESTION 2 Depends on the UROP. I know some people who spend all their non-class waking hours in lab, and some people who just spend a couple hours every other day on the project. I think that the minimum amount of time required for a UROP is six hours per week, which would definitely allow for another extracurricular activity, assuming you dont overload on coursework and manage your time well. Something else to take into consideration is what you want to get out of the UROP, and this is something that you will discuss with your supervisor (most likely during your interview) if you want to be seriously involved in the project, and get your name on a paper, then it will almost certainly have to be one of your, if not your only, primary extracurricular activity. QUESTION 3 Excerpt from the Koch Center site: Undergraduate students from across the campus have the opportunity to collaborate with Koch Institute faculty through the MIT Undergraduate Research Opportunity Program (UROP). The program allows students to gain hands-on experience in a laboratory setting while pursuing their research projects. Honestly, I dont know of any centers here that dont take UROPs. QUESTION 4 Yes. Thats not to say, though, that I wouldnt have been happy elsewhere. I think that, in the end, once you make your decision, your happiness level is a function of how well youve taken advantage of being wherever you are. Its true that MIT students sometimes make life nearly impossible for themselves, either by taking too many classes or trying to juggle too many extracurricular activities (Im definitely guilty of the latter.) Its in our nature. Theres no shame in acknowledging that youve broken the difficult-impossible boundary, and dropping a class or an extracurricular activity. I dont think that the workload is inherently impossible: most of the horror stories I hear seem to come from the MIT kid tendency to push ourselves to our limits and beyond. More questions? Send them my way. [emailprotected]
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