Hello,
I've been perusing this forum from time to time for the past couple of months learning more about studying Math Finance and am writing my first post to ask whether you guys would recommend that I apply to masters programs or gather work experience first.
I am currently a dual degree student at Boston University with a Bachelors of Science in Business Administration with a concentration in Finance and a Bachelors of Arts in Mathematics. My Math courses, I believe, are excellent preparation for a Math Fin program:
- all the standard "prereqs": Calc I-III (A), Differential Equations (A), Linear Algebra (A-)
- more advanced ones: PDE's (Fall), Probability (A-), Stochastic Processes (Spring), Analysis I (Fall) + II (Spring), Complex Variables (A), Chaotic Dynamical Systems (Fall), Math Finance - Derivatives (Fall)
Plus, I've taken Intro to Java (A) and Data Structures in Java (A-).
I haven't completed all these courses, but I will be done with most of these by the end of Fall semester at which point I figured I'd be sending out my applications to Masters programs. My goal, however, is not just to get any masters in MF - I will only be applying to the top schools in the US and to maybe two or three programs in the UK.
I realize that not having any work experience is a weakness to my application (and not having an astronomical GPA, only at 3.5 currently). I will have the possibility to do some research or intern part-time during Spring semester and full time over the summer, but that won't do my applications much good (unless I have something secured for Spring before sending them out... but even then I feel like I'm grasping at straws), although I do realize that that experience will no doubt be crucial in helping me secure a position after a program.
I have interned during a semester at a tiny hedge fund, but they weren't at all quantitative. Possibly, that experience combined with my studies in business will help compensate for my lack of work experience.
My current strategy is to apply to jobs and masters programs simultaneously, but am afraid that I might be spreading myself too thin. I am considering focusing on just one.
Any thoughts?
I've been perusing this forum from time to time for the past couple of months learning more about studying Math Finance and am writing my first post to ask whether you guys would recommend that I apply to masters programs or gather work experience first.
I am currently a dual degree student at Boston University with a Bachelors of Science in Business Administration with a concentration in Finance and a Bachelors of Arts in Mathematics. My Math courses, I believe, are excellent preparation for a Math Fin program:
- all the standard "prereqs": Calc I-III (A), Differential Equations (A), Linear Algebra (A-)
- more advanced ones: PDE's (Fall), Probability (A-), Stochastic Processes (Spring), Analysis I (Fall) + II (Spring), Complex Variables (A), Chaotic Dynamical Systems (Fall), Math Finance - Derivatives (Fall)
Plus, I've taken Intro to Java (A) and Data Structures in Java (A-).
I haven't completed all these courses, but I will be done with most of these by the end of Fall semester at which point I figured I'd be sending out my applications to Masters programs. My goal, however, is not just to get any masters in MF - I will only be applying to the top schools in the US and to maybe two or three programs in the UK.
I realize that not having any work experience is a weakness to my application (and not having an astronomical GPA, only at 3.5 currently). I will have the possibility to do some research or intern part-time during Spring semester and full time over the summer, but that won't do my applications much good (unless I have something secured for Spring before sending them out... but even then I feel like I'm grasping at straws), although I do realize that that experience will no doubt be crucial in helping me secure a position after a program.
I have interned during a semester at a tiny hedge fund, but they weren't at all quantitative. Possibly, that experience combined with my studies in business will help compensate for my lack of work experience.
My current strategy is to apply to jobs and masters programs simultaneously, but am afraid that I might be spreading myself too thin. I am considering focusing on just one.
Any thoughts?