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MIT's Anthropology Program immerses students in rigorous exploration of diverse fields including environmental governance and climate change impacts, socioeconomic disparities, culinary traditions, health anthropology, the intersection of technology and society, identity studies encompassing gender, sexuality, race and kinship, as well as migration and national identity. The curriculum delves into cultural theory, ethnographic research methodologies, and anthropology's relationship with other social sciences. Students examine frameworks for interpreting human actions and master analytical techniques for evaluating research findings. The program offers regional specializations covering Asia, Africa, Europe, Latin America, and North America, while addressing contemporary challenges like population movement, cultural pluralism, ecological equity, healthcare systems, global interconnectedness, belief systems, digital communities, technological subcultures, and dietary practices.
Anthropology majors develop expertise in cross-cultural analysis of human communities. The program highlights both cultural diversity and shared behavioral patterns, emphasizing cultural frameworks as key to understanding human variation while exploring fundamental commonalities across societies.
The first-year application is intended for students who have concluded their secondary education and wish to pursue a bachelor’s degree as a full-time university student.
For the TOEFL Internet Based Test (iBT), the minimum composite score is a 90. We recommend scores of at least 23 for each section, and a composite score of at least 100. Similarly, for the TOEFL revised Paper-Delivered Test (rPDT), we recommend scores of at least 23 for each section. If you have taken the TOEFL Paper Based Test (PBT) prior to June 2017, the minimum composite score is a 577, with a recommended composite score of at least 600.