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For all incoming grad students, consider the following:
- Get MIT ID ASAP – the card office is located in the student center, and having an ID gives you access to everything, so you definitely want to do it earlier than later. If you live in a dorm, make sure you talk to the front desk after getting your ID and they will have you fill out a piece of paper and in a week you will have MIT ID access to your dorm building (before that you need to use your key to enter your dorm building as opposed to swiping ID).
- Attend departmental orientation
- Attend GSC orientation (optional): I mark this orientation optional because I don't recall learning anything specific from it. The dental insurance session is the only one I can remember, as MIT grad student insurance (the one we get for free) covers annual eye exam but does not cover dental, which means that you need to get a separate dental plan if you are not on your parents' plan. There are two available for MIT grad students, and both covers dental offices in Cambridge area.
- Sign up for a gym membership: grad students get MIT gym membership for free, but there is still a short form you need to fill out at the main desk of MIT gym before you can access the gym. They will give you a little red card when you sign up which allows you to check out a towel every time.
- Consider transportation options if you live off-campus:
- Public transportation: MIT offers discounted monthly bus passes ($25/month) and T pass (access busses and subways for $37.5/month): http://web.mit.edu/facilities/transportation/tpass.html There is a MBTA chip in our student ID, so our ID acts just like a MBTA card, so you swipe it to get on any public transportation and can load money onto it through the MIT card office or using their website.
- Bringing your own car could be expensive due to parking expenses, so I'd consider ZipCar which has cars located throughout campus. MIT students receive special discount like no application fee, no security deposit and $25 annual fee which I think is a good deal: facilities/transportation/car_sharing.html
- Biking is the other option, though make sure you have access to in-door storage for the winter, as your bike will last through the winter outside. If you want a good deal, wait till Sept/Oct time frame where there is a bike aution at MIT and you can get a bike cheaply. Though please be extra careful biking in the Cambridge area – there is a spot at the intersection of Mass Ave and Albany St where an MIT undergrad was killed by a truck while biking a couple of years back. Boston/Cambridge area has some of the worst drivers I've seen in my life so I would not trust them to not hit you whether you are walking, driving or biking.
- Other ride-sharing programs listed on MIT's site: facilities/transportation/index.html
- Set up direct deposit if you are being paid by MIT. You will probably get an email about this.
- Consider getting an office if you are a PhD student. This does not need to happen right away as you might not need a place for research yet, but if you have a particular office that you want to be in (e.g., to with older grad students from your group), it might be better to request earlier than later.
- Be happy!
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