August 20th, 2006, 12:03 pm
I live in London and simply don't know anything, good or bad, about the course at UCD - you probably need to find someone else who is more familiar with it to give you an informed opinionThis means what it says - I really haven't got enough information to give any opinion on UCD, and it would be cavalier for me to suggest that someone should or shouldn't take up a place thereI did an MSc in applied maths a while ago in the UK, and by virtue of the hall of residence that I was living in, met a number of post-grads doing a course in banking and finance. I went to a few lectures out of interest and wasn't hugely impressed. I've kept in touch with a few of them and think that only a small number ended up working in anything banking related. The number of universities in the UK now offering a Fin Maths MSc is enormous. In the same way that some universities are better at teaching chemistry than others, the same thing will happen with Fin MathsHowever, what has transpired from doing an MBA, is that the career benefits from going to a top tier place (Harvard, Insead, Wharton, etc...) are great and usually give a very positive return on investment, despite the fees - you pay a lot but can get a huge pay-back. Doing an MBA at a less well known busness school might save on the fees, but the career benefits are much less, and sometimes even give a negative ROIQuoteNot too sure about this course. would it be well regonized by employersMy implication on Leeds is that I'm not familiar with the course, but because bono asked how it would be recognised by employers, if studying in the UK, one of the well known courses might be a safer bet - a year in one's career is a big investment to make after all