MIT class ring

Massachusetts Institute of Technology's class ring, often called the Brass Rat, is a commemorative ring for the graduating class of undergraduate students at MIT. The ring is redesigned each year by a committee of MIT students. The class ring has three main sections: the bezel, containing MIT's mascot, the beaver; the MIT seal (seal shank); and the class year (class shank). The side surfaces of the current ring design show the Boston and Cambridge skylines. An MIT campus map and the student's name are engraved on the inner surface. On earlier versions, the Great Dome and Building 10 facade were featured on each shank, with "MIT" under it on one side and the class year on the other. The version of the MIT class ring for graduate students is known as the "Grad Rat".[1]

The phrase "Brass Rat" is derived from the alleged resemblance of the gold (hence brass-like appearance) beaver to a rat. Among other reasons the beaver was chosen as mascot (and therefore for the front bezel of the ring) because it is an American animal, and considered to be "the engineer of the animal world".[2] The ring is not literally made of brass, and has typically been made in various alloys of gold, platinum, or stainless steel.

  1. ^ "MIT Grad Rat: The Graduate Student Class Ring". MIT Grad Rat: The Graduate Student Class Ring. Retrieved 2024-02-18.
  2. ^ "Shiny new beaver mascot has debut". MIT News Office. 10 May 2000. Retrieved 29 December 2006.