June 10th, 2006, 1:49 pm
Case 1:I think they will get to the end of the course intact, though obviously with a bit of hard work.Whether it's worth it is harder to say.There's a bit of a variable in the quality of the both the degrees you have and the one you might be taught, but it'a hard to see a big return. You lose salary in this time as well as the cost of the course.Also some hiring managers really don't like people with two masters degrees in similar subjects.If the 2nd masters is in a much better place can help, but is on the margins.Case 2:I think you're right, but if you put the effort in to study the maths they don't teach you in these courses, can be swung.I don't have a strong feeling about the relatrive merits of the three place. If forced to choose, I'd pick the one that had the most things in it you didn't understand. Case 3:Can do the CQF, or the evening MSc's at Birkbeck et al. Hard, but less expensive.Final question.You might as well shout calculus at your dog as try to talk to most HHs about your maths. They do it by keyword matching, and not very good algorithms at that.That being said, your friend probably couldn't convince us either. Clearly he has some potential, but unless he is some sort of Gauss, he will need education to be of any use to a bank.