Difference between revisions of "Massachusetts Institute of Technology"

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It was ranked the #2 school in PC Magazine's Top 20 Wired Colleges.<ref>{{cite web|title= #2 M.I.T.|work=PC Magazine|format=HTML|language=English|url=http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2704,2073460,00.asp}}</ref>
 
It was ranked the #2 school in PC Magazine's Top 20 Wired Colleges.<ref>{{cite web|title= #2 M.I.T.|work=PC Magazine|format=HTML|language=English|url=http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2704,2073460,00.asp}}</ref>
  
As a technological school, MIT's peers are CalTech ([[California Institute of Technology]]), which is private like MIT, and two state universities, Georgia Tech ([[Georgia Institute of Technology]]) and [[Purdue University]] (in Indiana).
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Other well-known universities with a technological focus include [[California Institute of Technology]] ("CalTech"), [[Rensselaer Polytechnic Institution]] (RPI), and [[Georgia Institute of Technology]] (Georgia Tech).
  
 
==Notes and references==
 
==Notes and references==
 
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<references/>
 
{{Nb_US_universities|Massachusetts}}
 
{{Nb_US_universities|Massachusetts}}

Revision as of 22:49, September 24, 2009

Massachusetts Institute of Technology
City: Cambridge, Massachusetts
Type: Private
Colors: red, gray
Website: http://web.mit.edu/

The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) is a major research university in the United States, located in Cambridge, Massachusetts (about three miles east of Harvard University). In 1949 its president James R. Killian described it as "a university polarized around science, engineering, and the arts."

MIT pioneered the use of hands-on laboratory instruction and made important contributions to the World War II development of radar. In the 1950s, the Project Whirlwind computer at MIT developed the use of magnetic core memory, the first practical form of RAM, and the use of computers for simulation and real-time control. MIT was a pioneer in university-industry liaisons, particularly the startups that grew up around Route 128 starting in the 1950s, and helped make the Boston area a leader in high-tech industry.

MIT was founded in 1861, and was among the first universities to receive land-grant money under the Morrill Act. It was originally located in Boston, moving to its present location in Cambridge in 1916. The 1916 "Maclaurin buildings" form a symmetrical complex in classical-Roman-like[1] monumental style. The complex frames three sides of the large grassy sward now called Killian Court, facing the Charles River (but separated from it by a multilane parkway). The names of some hundred or so famous scientists (Aristotle, Lavoisier, Faraday, etc.) are engraved on the "attics of the pavilions" of the buildings.[2]

MIT's business school—the Sloan School of Management[3]—is very highly ranked and offers undergraduate and graduate programs.

MIT's two most well-known professors are Noam Chomsky (linguistics) and Richard Lindzen (meteorology).

It was ranked the #2 school in PC Magazine's Top 20 Wired Colleges.[4]

Other well-known universities with a technological focus include California Institute of Technology ("CalTech"), Rensselaer Polytechnic Institution (RPI), and Georgia Institute of Technology (Georgia Tech).

Notes and references

  1. complete with inscription, "MASSACHVSETTS INSTITVTE OF TECHNOLOGY," with V's replacing U's
  2. Names on MIT Buildings around Killian Court, MIT Institute Archives & Special Collections
  3. Named for Alfred P. Sloan
  4. #2 M.I.T. (English) (HTML). PC Magazine.