I actually go to school in New York.. so I thought a change of environment would be nice...
this is bs. dont listen to itwhere do you want to live and work primarily?
These 3 choices are outstanding so it's really a matter of preference. You shouldn't just pick a school because it's the most prestigious, you want to make the best of your time there, sometimes the environment and the lifestyle are a big factor in your success.
if you don't care about working in Europe then LSE might be a bit too far from your present location. Also, you might want to tell us a bit more about yourself, it will help us provide comments that are actually useful.
Not necessarily.
Stanford is not a highly rated program judging by quantnet ranking. Regarding LSU, I would also like to know if OP sent an application to their Msc in Financial mathematics.
I'm interested in knowing if there are any particular reasons why the OP can't decide between Princeton and the rest (which is an easy choice to make for many).
Now if there are none then the choice is obvious and it's a shorter travel too.
really, i thought Stanford is the most difficult to get in among the three...Princeton isn't only the most established, it's by far the best brand value / reputation / quality of the programs you listed. Stanford/LSE are not at the same level or quality.
I think above a certain level, more selectivity doesn't correlate with quality.really, i thought Stanford is the most difficult to get in among the three...
No it is not even close. The size and quality of students at Princeton is unmatched by mit.Why is MIT not in the same level as princeton? I would assume their prestige and reputation and brand value would be the same/similar.
Thank you everyone for your input! This is really helpful. Last point, I was checking Stanford's faculty for the Mathematical and Computational Finance - it feels like they have a stronger faculty that publishes books in the mathematical finance/stochastic field, much more than that of Princeton. Should I be taking this into consideration?
do you want to publish books or work in finance? do you want to do academic research in finance or work making money on the street?Thank you everyone for your input! This is really helpful. Last point, I was checking Stanford's faculty for the Mathematical and Computational Finance - it feels like they have a stronger faculty that publishes books in the mathematical finance/stochastic field, much more than that of Princeton. Should I be taking this into consideration?