- Joined
- 1/10/12
- Messages
- 62
- Points
- 18
I am here asking dumb questions again. Of course I've done my own homework, but I just like to pick others' brains
I am pretty sure I do not want to be a hardcore quant:
1. My programming skill is passable, but not really outstanding, and I do not intend to spend a big portion of my career writing codes.
2. My maths is O.K, but definitely not up to the standards of some elite Chinese/French schools. It also terrifies me to think the prospect of competing against physics/CS phd in technical fields.
3. I have better motivation in an interactive environment, tracking real-time events and talking with people. Flow-trading or risk management thus sound more appealing to me.
4. I am planning to work in Asia-Pacific, where MIT Sloan may be a more helpful, prestigious brand name in job-searching, compared to Columbia engineering. Yes, I am practial, and vain.
(The difference in costs is not a major concern for me. I will live with a relative in Boston if I attend MIT, this saving will reduce the cost of Mfin to a level comparable to living in NYC and attending Columbia.)
Given this, you shouldn't be surprised that I am inclined toward the "philosophy" of MIT Mfin, i.e. its flexibility, its customizability, its affliation with Business School, blah blah blah. On the other hand, Columbia MFE has placed many people into my "target jobs", so I reckon that a nominally "hardcore quant-prep" program like Columbia can also help me fulfill my aspiration.
So, what do you think about the trade-off between:
(a) Mfin's "soft" advantage
(b) Columbia's academic rigor and established course structure
I know (a) may be more like a result of propaganda, a marketing hype that simply turns "disorganization" into "flexibility", and turns "cashing in Sloan brand" into "synergy".
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[1] Does Mfin really better fit my above-mentioned personal conditions? Or am I, as I am now suspecting, actually an impressionable consumer fallen prey to Sloan's money-making, deceptively-packaged program?
[2] How do you compare the selectivity of these 2 programs?
Any advice will be appreciated!
I am pretty sure I do not want to be a hardcore quant:
1. My programming skill is passable, but not really outstanding, and I do not intend to spend a big portion of my career writing codes.
2. My maths is O.K, but definitely not up to the standards of some elite Chinese/French schools. It also terrifies me to think the prospect of competing against physics/CS phd in technical fields.
3. I have better motivation in an interactive environment, tracking real-time events and talking with people. Flow-trading or risk management thus sound more appealing to me.
4. I am planning to work in Asia-Pacific, where MIT Sloan may be a more helpful, prestigious brand name in job-searching, compared to Columbia engineering. Yes, I am practial, and vain.
(The difference in costs is not a major concern for me. I will live with a relative in Boston if I attend MIT, this saving will reduce the cost of Mfin to a level comparable to living in NYC and attending Columbia.)
Given this, you shouldn't be surprised that I am inclined toward the "philosophy" of MIT Mfin, i.e. its flexibility, its customizability, its affliation with Business School, blah blah blah. On the other hand, Columbia MFE has placed many people into my "target jobs", so I reckon that a nominally "hardcore quant-prep" program like Columbia can also help me fulfill my aspiration.
So, what do you think about the trade-off between:
(a) Mfin's "soft" advantage
(b) Columbia's academic rigor and established course structure
I know (a) may be more like a result of propaganda, a marketing hype that simply turns "disorganization" into "flexibility", and turns "cashing in Sloan brand" into "synergy".
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[1] Does Mfin really better fit my above-mentioned personal conditions? Or am I, as I am now suspecting, actually an impressionable consumer fallen prey to Sloan's money-making, deceptively-packaged program?
[2] How do you compare the selectivity of these 2 programs?
Any advice will be appreciated!