- Joined
- 6/6/08
- Messages
- 1,194
- Points
- 58
Okay, I'm just wondering...if I want to get to a quant position, should I try and land the regular 2-year analyst position at Goldman Sachs/JPMorgan/Lehman Brothers/other large financial institution or take the full $50,000 brunt of debt on myself?
In the current economy, one of my mom's friends said that when the economy was in a downturn, to stay in school and come out when the economy turns good...but I'm also wondering where I would get the money to do so, and how much does having an MFE from a not-so-top-tier school affect my chances?
Right now, after 6 undergrad semesters, my cumulative GPA in info systems engineering from Lehigh University is 3.23, which isn't particularly amazing, with my major GPA being in the 3.4s somewhere.
I have one year left of undergrad studying. If I want to find a position that I'm hired for my engineering skills and applying them and operations research techniques regularly at my job, what should be the route I take?
What kind of employers pay for an MFE and by what point? Right now, I am very unsure of what to do. Any suggestions?
In the current economy, one of my mom's friends said that when the economy was in a downturn, to stay in school and come out when the economy turns good...but I'm also wondering where I would get the money to do so, and how much does having an MFE from a not-so-top-tier school affect my chances?
Right now, after 6 undergrad semesters, my cumulative GPA in info systems engineering from Lehigh University is 3.23, which isn't particularly amazing, with my major GPA being in the 3.4s somewhere.
I have one year left of undergrad studying. If I want to find a position that I'm hired for my engineering skills and applying them and operations research techniques regularly at my job, what should be the route I take?
What kind of employers pay for an MFE and by what point? Right now, I am very unsure of what to do. Any suggestions?