TsunamiJoe said:
Also are you transfering into MIT? If so, I'm afraid your chances are small:
* Total number of transfer students who applied: 319
* Total number of transfer students who were admitted: 5
Not sure if this is directed at me or not, but no, I plan on staying here at RIT. I personally love it here.
RIT's difficulty of admissions changes drastically with the departments. If you apply to Engineering or a science, you will need to have a good record. I know a few dumb-as-bricks people in easy departments like Engineering Technology, though. They take barely any calculus, and only get a cursory glance at the hard physics. In my department, though, I have to take 10 math classes, modern physics, semiconductor device physics, etc. It's much more intense competition to get in.
Incidentally, like MIT, it's a lot easier to get in than it is to stay here. If you don't put in the work, you'll get terrible grades. I've seen people leave after only the first quarter. The stats for physics undergrads are astonishing. Every year about 60 people start the program, and every year, 6 people graduate from it. Engineering is mostly a lot of work. If you have a good head for the material, it's not "hard," per se, but you will spend a lot of time studying.
RIT is a great place, and the president is putting $300 Million into making it even better. We're a top-notch institution, but we haven't really been associated with the top echelon because our name isn't as recognizable outside of the scientific community (and until recently, we haven't had the money to do large research). Inside, of course, people know who we are. We haven't been awarding PhDs for very long, so compared to MIT and other schools like it, we don't have lots of doctoral graduates floating around publishing work. But of course that's changing. At the moment, we're building about 4 new buildings (including a $20 Million expansion of the Microsystems department with new clean rooms and office space). They're in the planning stages of a multi-hundred-million dollar addition in the form of "College Town," a housing, night-life, and shopping center for RIT students and staff. Our faculty is great: one of the physics professors was recently a named author on a publication regarding a measurement system for galaxy clustering. Bruce Smith is [one of] the top researchers in the field of microlithography. We're doing pioneering research on immersion microlithography (we're able to make features on silicon as small as 35 nm). Part of the $300 Million mentioned above is $100 Million going into recruiting new faculty.
Truthfully, I think getting in now is getting your foot in the door, since RIT is on its way up to becoming a recognizable name.
This sounds like a giant advertisement! It wasn't meant to, though; I simply wanted to show that although RIT doesn't have the name of MIT, it's an excellent school, and you certainly won't "miss out" on anything (except maybe some famous professors like Walter Lewin). One of my mentors here actually went to MIT for his undergrad, and he said that MIT is a better grad school than an undergrad school, mostly because that's where most of the good faculty is. He also mentioned that at MIT you tend to get lost in the crowd as an undergrad. I'm not sure about the truthfulness of his statement, but I tend to believe him. Speaking from personal experience, however, RIT has a low faculty:student ratio, and almost all of my teachers have been very charismatic people who are willing to help you with anything you ask them for.
Wow, that's a lot of typing...sorry

Feel free to ask any questions. I hope I answered (perhaps preemptively) some that you were having.