Hi all, I'm a highschool senior trying to make some college-related decisions, and I'd like to ask for some advice.
My current situation is:
- I want to work on technical alignment. For exogenous reasons, not going to college (e.g., taking a year off, just being an autodidact/independent researcher) is not an available option, so I'll have to leverage my undergraduate experience as much as possible to upskill on technical alignment.
- I'll probably double major somewhere along CS/Math and maybe CompBio.
- Accepted to Harvard (non-binding REA). Was planning to apply to Stanford, MIT, Harvey Mudd for RD, but ...
- ... I truly despise the application writing process, every single second of it, and it has taken a significant toll on my mental health. I'd prefer not to go through that again, although I can if necessary.
My considerations are:
- Flexibility - Is it possible to take advanced (under)graduate courses while skipping prerequisites? I've been (and currently am) self-studying a bunch of (under)graduate subjects that I think would be helpful (mainly from the Study Guide) and it'd really suck to have to take them all again just for meeting prereqs for advanced classes.
- I don't really care much about getting class credits as long as (1) I don't get kicked out of school for low credit and (2) the low credits or lack of prereqs won't prevent me from taking advanced subjects later on.
- Are there any alignment research community/group/event nearby?
- No need for financial aid right now.
The impression I got about Harvard (probably not so well-justified, just from anecdotes across reddit/etc) is that they're much less flexible in terms of class choices or prereqs compared to more traditionally "engineering" colleges like eg MIT. I also think the alignment community is mostly centered around the Bay area and that it hasn't really developed much around Harvard yet (I know about HAIST, though!)
Would Harvard be a good option to just go with, or is there enough additional value from Stanford/MIT/Harvey Mudd that it would be worth applying to any one of those colleges? Thanks!
(Apologies in advance if I broke any posting norms.)
(I am writing this before reading other responses to avoid anchoring)
My experience (current joint CS/Math concentrator) has been that Harvard is much more flexible with requirements than say, MIT (I don't know about the other colleges you named). There are only a handful of "core" courses (called "Geneds" that are typically very easy), a language requirement, and then 3 distributional classes (one must be Science, one must be Social Science, one must be Humanities), and then other than that... basically nothing besides your major's requirement. I have felt very free to take what I want, and it is no problem to skip ahead to grad-level courses if you feel ready.
Compare this to MIT, where (going off of what my friends there say) there are a bunch of cores STEM requirements (chemistry, biology, physics, etc.) in addition to even more humanities requirements than Harvard (apparently you have to take one a semester).
Overall, I have felt very academically unconstrained at Harvard, both in terms of not having to sit through boring requirements, and having great advanced classes available.
In my experience, Harvard has a considerably more active AI safety community than MIT's MAIA.