October 28th, 2007, 12:53 pm
I really feel shame that they charge you their student lists. They can select their preferred recruiters but they charge a fee.So, they make money from students and recruiters. I can't believe this!With due respect, the CQF course contents is the best I have ever came across. I mean relevant and straight to the core knowledge which we need to learn QF.I think CQF is best for classroom learning. Online learning is a bit too expensive with the cost nearly close to 10K pounds.However, I also think CQF is a value for those who have a MFE or MFM from a decent school but not a top school. It does add values. My feeling is whether current MFE, MQF or MFM programs can really deliver their best knowledge in 12 months time frame. How much can one learn in one year, and this goesto CQF as well which is a six months program. In this case, I will probably do a MSc in statisitics and then go for a few finance subjects. It costs less with more technical contents. QuoteOriginally posted by: DCFCNoshame, the following schools want to charge us:Columbia, Carnegie Mellon Dartmouth,Yale, Harvard, Stanford, etc.Imperial, Tanaka, and Baruch don't.Courant come out rather well, since Peter Carr actually found us and sent the year book. Given how much these courses charge, frankly I'd expect all to be that standard, but they aren't.