MIT MFin MIT MFin Admission Discussion

Hi guys,

Do they send interview invites on a rolling basis or do I just assume I got rejected because I still have not gotten the invite?
 
Hello everyone! I was wondering if anyone has received their interview invitation for the MFin program at MIT. They said they would be conducting interviews in late January. I assume they had to send out invitations by this week?
Hi, I just heard on 1/28/2021 that I was invited for an interview
 
Congrats folks.

For the math's assessment, don't be too worried. It's short, 4/5 questions designed to take a couple of minutes each. Expect a True/False of some sort, some probability, some introductory calculus of some sort. That's the ballpark. It's just another datapoint, I was admitted and I did not answer every question correctly. There is also a maths placement test in the first week of the program (there are two summer maths courses, normal and advanced). The choice is ultimately yours, though.

This year, a coding assessment was added. It'll be hard (if not impossible) to find information on it, as it hasn't been done before. As a result, I don't expect it'll be overly challenging for folks familiar with code. For us, and potentially for this class too, there is a coding assessment in the first semester anyway. Being programming literate is not a requirement for the program, but they like to know where people stand.

Over-admission (200 down to 130) is due to people going elsewhere. Don't think there is a single program out there with 100% matriculation. For us, there was only one batch of interviews, where people were interviewed in London/Paris/US/Asia/Skype and so on. I'd say the figure of 25%-35% of interviews leading to an offer is pretty close.

Good luck.
 
As someone else said, there were around 200, give or take, time slots to schedule your interview. Assuming the number applications didnt vary significantly from last year and each slot is taken by a single interviewee, there could be more invites coming. This is just a guess, I am not entirely sure. Maybe you could send an email to the adcom
 
Kinda unrelated, but a question about the program for anyone who knows: what are exit-ops like for students in the program? Really, I would like to know if students have a generally ok time pursuing further academia if desired i.e. a PhD / what post-program careers are like for students with prior work experience- it seems like the program is generally catered to new grads
 
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Kinda unrelated, but a question about the program for anyone who knows: what are exit-ops like for students in the program? Really, I would like to know if students have a generally ok time pursuing further academia if desired i.e. a PhD / what post-program careers are like for students with prior work experience- it seems like the program is generally catered to new grads
I have the same question. What FE programs would possibly lead to a PhD?
 
I have the same question. What FE programs would possibly lead to a PhD?
Columbia's Financial Econ, Stanfords ICME, and Princeton's MFIN all usually have a couple students pursuing PhDs post graduation (if not directly transitioning to one at the same school), just don't know anything about MIT
 
Kinda unrelated, but a question about the program for anyone who knows: what are exit-ops like for students in the program? Really, I would like to know if students have a generally ok time pursuing further academia if desired i.e. a PhD / what post-program careers are like for students with prior work experience- it seems like the program is generally catered to new grads

From my experience, there aren't a whole lot of people who enrol on the program who are interested in pursuing a PhD. However, it is definitely possible, and has been done before (likely to be difficult to enrol in MIT's Finance PhD program, it is highly selective). There is opportunity enough to work closely with professors, and if you play your cards right I'm sure you could land a top PhD program, but you have to very knowingly gear your time on the program towards research (whereas the bulk of the class will focus on projects, action learning, and so on).

In terms of catering to new grads, I wouldn't say there is an explicit leaning one way or another. For my class, the average full-time work experience was still north of a year, with a roughly equal split of straight from school and coming from industry.
 
From my experience, there aren't a whole lot of people who enrol on the program who are interested in pursuing a PhD. However, it is definitely possible, and has been done before (likely to be difficult to enrol in MIT's Finance PhD program, it is highly selective). There is opportunity enough to work closely with professors, and if you play your cards right I'm sure you could land a top PhD program, but you have to very knowingly gear your time on the program towards research (whereas the bulk of the class will focus on projects, action learning, and so on).

In terms of catering to new grads, I wouldn't say there is an explicit leaning one way or another. For my class, the average full-time work experience was still north of a year, with a roughly equal split of straight from school and coming from industry.
did you notice any individuals in your class north of 30?
 
What is your terminal goal in getting a PhD? Isn't an Mfin sufficient for industry?
Really an undergrad is sufficient for industry, with an mba or mfin really being useful if you’re having a tough time establishing a network or breaking in. I’m pursing a mfin primarily because 1) my stats from my undergrad aren’t good enough to get into a top phd 2) I’m unsure that I want to remain in the industry at the moment and 3) because I feel like I have a number of skills I want to build up on more and it’ll be harder to justify leaving the workforce later on (I’m 24 right now and it’s already hard)

to be clearer, the programs I listed above (Stanford, princeton, Columbia) are my top preferences because they cater best to my interests. Fully get that MIT may be workable given my interests, but not necessarily the best fit for them, just something I’ll have to think about if I’m lucky enough to get in
 
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Really an undergrad is sufficient for industry, with an mba or mfin really being useful if you’re having a tough time establishing a network or breaking in. I’m pursing a mfin primarily because 1) my stats from my undergrad aren’t good enough to get into a top phd 2) I’m unsure that I want to remain in the industry at the moment and 3) because I feel like I have a number of skills I want to build up on more and it’ll be harder to justify leaving the workforce later on (I’m 24 right now and it’s already hard)

to be clearer, the programs I listed above (Stanford, princeton, Columbia) are my top preferences because they cater best to my interests. Fully get that MIT may be workable given my interests, but not necessarily the best fit for them, just something I’ll have to think about if I’m lucky enough to get in
That makes sense. Question, don't some of these programs have a preference against saying you aim to get a PhD after the program? They seem to favor the professional route for whatever reason, rather than merely the applicants favoring it.
 
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