Bad Math: MIT Miscounts Its New Business School Students, now Pays them to Defer

Normally, schools offer scholarships to entice students to enroll. This year, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s business school handed them money to go away.

The Sloan School of Management’s full-time M.B.A. program, usually about 400 students, was oversubscribed by an unusually high number of students this year. Rather than expand the class size, the school asked for volunteers willing to wait a year to enroll, sending out an e-mail just a couple of weeks before the Aug. 23 kickoff barbecue. By that point, many expectant students had quit jobs and secured housing in the Boston area.

How did the math whizzes at MIT get the numbers so wrong?

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Posted in * Culture-Watch, * Economics, Politics, Economy, Education, Young Adults

One comment on “Bad Math: MIT Miscounts Its New Business School Students, now Pays them to Defer

  1. Marie Blocher says:

    What happened?
    Did they lose their sliderule?