INTERNATIONAL ENROLLMENT JUMPS IN CLASS OF 2008
by Michael Mack
The MIT Center for Real Estate welcomes its incoming Class of 2008 – 40 students (drawn from a pool of 110 applicants), a remarkably international mix admitted to MIT/CRE's flagship program, the Master of Science in Real Estate Development (MSRED). This class features a striking increase in international students, reflecting the Center's increased global presence and focus on international real estate. Of the 40 new class members, 15 (38%) come from overseas – an increase of 14% over last year's 24% – in a trend that the Center has established over several years. Our new students hail from China, Columbia, England, France, India, Nigeria, Philippines, South Korea, and Taiwan.
Class members bring substantial work experience in the real estate industry, from analysis for McDonalds of India, to the development of water supply infrastructure for the government of Yemen, to bond trading for Charles Schwab, to the development of a lodging business from a barren cattle pasture in Colorado. Industry sectors are broadly represented, with student backgrounds in design and architecture, acquisitions, construction, project management, development, finance, restructuring, and investment. Students have come to MIT/CRE to focus on work that includes:
- Sustainable design and development
- Prefabrication
- The special challenges of aging cities
- Revitalization and redevelopment
- International real estate investment
- Rural land markets
- Affordable housing development
- A growing niche market: retirement residential community development for LGBT (Lesbian/Gay/Bisexual/Transgender) baby boomers
Students also bring the avid curiosity that thrives in MIT/CRE's multidisciplinary environment. Members of our Class of 2008 have enjoyed:
Captaining commercial fishing vessels in Bristol Bay Alaska to catch Sockeye (“Red”) Salmon for the world market
Volunteering to help people with developmental and cognitive disabilities
Teaching English to adults in Rome, Italy
Snowboarding, lacrosse, and soccer
Monopoly
Television's "The Simpsons"
Preparing to run the Boston Marathon while at MIT
Managing the national media tour for Martin Scorsese’s The Blues, a seven-part film series produced for PBS by WGBH Boston
Class registration is on Tuesday, September 4th, with the first day of classes on Wednesday.
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