MITx courses are delivered through the edX platform or through MITx online. Learn more about MITx, our global learning community, research and innovation, and new educational pathways. View our course list below; new courses are added regularly.
At MIT course numbers and abbreviations refer to courses of study leading to specific academic degrees and, by extension, to the departments or programs offering those degrees. For example, Course 6 refers to the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science.
MIT OpenCourseWare (OCW) is a free, publicly accessible, openly-licensed digital collection of high-quality teaching and learning materials, presented in an easily accessible format.
Physics (Course 8)
Thanks to its prestigious Sloan School of Management, MIT also has a strong international reputation for social sciences and business-related courses. These strengths are reflected in the QS World University Rankings by Subject 2021, which is based upon academic reputation, employer reputation and research citations.
Everyone at MIT is smart, there is no doubt about that. Some are geniuses, but most just work hard. There are quirks that many MIT students share, but most people are not socially awkward; they can function in greater society and even befriend people! Also, not all of us know how computers work.
The assignments and exams do correspond to actual materials used at MIT. So OCW courses can give you a sense of the difficulty and workload of MIT courses, but, as JeffE indicates, the experience overall cannot be the same.
MIT doesn't don't offer credit or certificates for using OCW. Instead, use OCW to guide your own life-long learning, or use OCW to teach others. Knowledge is your reward! OCW is made for sharing.
MIT OCW was originally served by a custom content management system based on Microsoft's Content Management Server, which was replaced in mid-2010 with a Plone-based content management system.
The Course 3 SB, the Bachelor of Science in Materials Science and Engineering, is pursued by the majority of undergraduate students in the department. In addition to the GIRs and departmental subject requirements, students are required to complete either a thesis or an internship.
Brain and Cognitive Sciences (Course 9)
15.000 Explorations in Management Broad introduction to the various aspects of management including analytics, accounting and finance, operations, marketing, entrepreneurship and leadership, organizations, economics, systems dynamics, and negotiation and communication.
A course is a course, of course, except when it is a subject. At MIT course numbers and abbreviations refer to courses of study leading to specific academic degrees and, by extension, to the departments or programs offering those degrees. For example, Course 6 refers to the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science.
Appears under the credit units if the subject can be taken more than once for academic credit. Indicates subjects whose content is substantively similar to the subject described. Interested students should take care to register for credit for only one of the subjects indicated.
IAP is MIT’s Independent Activities Period, which takes place in January. #-#-# units or Units arranged. Credit units (hours) indicate the total amount of time spent in class and laboratory, plus the estimated time that the average student spends on outside preparation, for one regular term subject.
Denotes a subject that is taught with one or more subjects at a different level, or with all or a significant part of one or more subjects at the same level. Subjects that meet together have different coursework requirements. Prereq: Introduces prerequisites (additional prereqs may be listed in the subject content).
J. A "J" in brackets appears at the end of a subject number to indicate that it is jointly offered by or cross-listed with more than one department. (New) Follows the subject number and title to indicate a subject that is new in the current academic year.
School of the MIT. After listing all the people, the catalog opens with the “objects of the School of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology”. The school was explicitly for people who wanted to be mechanical, civil, or mining engineers, chemists, builders, or architects.
Elements of Chemistry. The first-year chemistry class is split into two halves: “Chemistry of the Non-metallic Elements” and “Chemistry of the Metals”. They are as described by their title: literally the elements studied in groups. To be fair, Mendeleev’s version of the periodic table was published in 1869, four years after this catalog was printed.
Harvard mergers. Over the next three or so decades Harvard made not one, not two, but five merger attempts. The first merger attempt was a few years before MIT’s first classes, and five more happened in 1870, 1878, 1893, 1897, and 1904.
It turns out he’s been teaching for over fifty years. And then I fell down the rabbit hole and learned many more interesting facts, some of which became a Twitter thread. For example, William Barton Rodgers was not only MIT’s founder, but MIT’s only physics professor for its first few years.
The five categories are: Historical context: notes on MIT’s history in general, changes to the format of the catalog, and undergraduate admissions. Undergraduate requirements: general requirements that undergraduates need to get a degree.
This is much less than today’s requirement, which is 8 subjects of at least 9 units each, so 72 total.
Dormitories. MIT’s first dormitory is known to us as Senior House, although it’d be a while before it’d be called Senior House in the course catalog. It was in construction when the Institute initially moved and completed its construction the next year.
MITx, the Institute’s portfolio of massively open online courses, offers flexible access to a range of interactive courses developed and taught by instructors from MIT.
The Infinite Corridor connects many of MIT’s main buildings. MIT students work on a solar electric vehicle. Collaboration is a hallmark of an MIT education. MIT is dedicated to providing its students with an education that combines rigorous academic study and the excitement of discovery.
The MIT Schwarzman College of Computing, opened in fall 2019, is a cross-cutting entity with education and research links across all five schools.
The MIT Course Catalogue, also referred to as the MIT Bulletin and the MIT Course Catalog, is a rich source of information on the courses and programs that have made the Massachusetts Institute of Technology the major institution it is today. This collection contains the Catalogues from 1865 to 2005. Electronic versions of the Course Catalog and ...
Class prerequisites and instructors. A word about Courses at MIT Each department or program within the Institute is identified by Course number. When capitalized, the word Course refers to an organized curriculum leading to a specified degree; otherwise, the word course, or subject, refers to the individual class.