It depends on what subject it is in:
Math: No: It has to be higher than 9.2
English: Yes: But be careful because that is the minimum
History: No: has to be 9.4 and above
I know this because my mom is a professor there and I finally got into Ryerson for history. Mit would not let me in with a 8.9 GPA. :)
Just do well on your SAT's
For Carnegie Mellon, according to the Princeton Review, the average acceptance GPA is 3.61.
4.0
4-illinois 3-Berkeley 2-Stanford 1-MIT
Chang is a member of the MIT Corporation and is on the advisory boards of the U.S. Stock Exchange, Stanford University, and the University of California at Berkeley.
Nearly all universities offer MBAs in Business. The top 5 Business Universities however are Harvard, Stanford, University of Pennsylvania, MIT and Northwestern University.
he was a railroad developer
The average GPA of MIT students is roughly 3.0 on a 4.0 scale. MIT doesn't release grade statistics about its students (no class rank, etc.) so I don't think more accurate information is available. -Current freshman at MIT
MIT needs at least a 3.8
There are several major universities that have machine design courses. Among these colleges are MIT, Stanford University, UC - Berkeley, and the California Institute of Technology.
The top MBA schools in order are Chicago University, Harvard, Stanford, Pennsylvania (Wharton), MIT (in Staon), and Columbia, only to name a select few.
Mit Romney initially went to Stanford for 4 quarters before moving to France to become a missionary. Upon return he transferred to Brigham Young University where he obtained his undergraduate in 1971. In 1975 he graduated from Harvard with a joint JD/MBA.
The University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School of Business is ranked highest by U.S. News and World Report for its graduate degrees in Finance. Other top-tier schools include the University of Chicago, New York University, and Stanford University, among others. The top-ranked Masters of Business Administration (MBA) programs are those of Stanford University, Harvard University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), The University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School, and Northwestern University's Kellogg School.