Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The close proximity to the brutalist Obama Center will be the final nail in the coffin of U Chicago. Wait for it.
How so?
Anonymous wrote:The close proximity to the brutalist Obama Center will be the final nail in the coffin of U Chicago. Wait for it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do people know who’s at the “bottom” of the top 10%?
The cum laude kids (top 10 percent) were announced in order of GPA.
That’s awful and so unnecessary. Shame on the school. More humane to announce them in alphabetical order. Just my opinion.
Right. Everyone should get a trophy.
Dedekind cuts and field extensions aren't any more useful. Actually, the best major for quant dev (which is the most common quant job) is still CS.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The education is top notch and work ethic instilled translates well to employment.
Employment in everything but engineering, correct?
Apart from molecular engineering, UChicago doesn’t have engineering at all.
It's an econ school, why does it need engineering?
UChicago is great for humanities, social sciences, math, physics. Fully agree that there is no need for engineering.
One third majoring in econ by graduation.
It may be because Math/Physics/Stats/Engineering is so hard...it's the default
Uchicago economics is very very hard. It’s because economics has the best outcomes coming out of college. A physics degree is almost entirely useless if you aren’t spending most of your time in other courses.
I would think Physics at UChicago would set you up nicely for a quant job. I think they even have a large quant trading club and I see Physics/Math/Stats majors. Impressive club!
What’s the purpose of going all the way with a major as hard as physics to get a quant job? Just do math or economics and you’ll have a much easier time explaining why you even did the degree you did.
$$$$ That's why I would think. This firms want SMART. Although I also think Sam Bankman Fried went this route, MIT - Physics - Jane Street... it's really not uncommon
It's not that it's uncommon-just unnecessary. Economics majors are smart, so are physics majors-but a majority of a physics major will be completely useless. If you're worried about looking smart, do mathematics (which is arguably more abstract and rigorous than physics) and actually learn content that'll help you with the job, rather than focusing your weekends on Poisson brackets and Partial Wave Expansion.
How is he finding the work? What are the Williams football players majoring in?Anonymous wrote:The thing I remember most about UChicago is that they had a dejected football scout at the summer camps prior to senior year. My son literally won the entire camp in a 1:1 lineman elimination challenge and he was the last one standing.
He had a 3.5 and a 1300 and the Chicago coach just said, sorry amigo, I can’t recruit you on those numbers.
We had already received some mailings from U Chicago including a big postcard with our kid’s name on it. We posted it on the fridge for a while and wrote with a sharpie, “SORRY AMIGO !!!!” As a joke.
He went to Williams instead
"I like physics" is a perfectly fine reason. Pretty easy to explain.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The education is top notch and work ethic instilled translates well to employment.
Employment in everything but engineering, correct?
Apart from molecular engineering, UChicago doesn’t have engineering at all.
It's an econ school, why does it need engineering?
UChicago is great for humanities, social sciences, math, physics. Fully agree that there is no need for engineering.
One third majoring in econ by graduation.
It may be because Math/Physics/Stats/Engineering is so hard...it's the default
Uchicago economics is very very hard. It’s because economics has the best outcomes coming out of college. A physics degree is almost entirely useless if you aren’t spending most of your time in other courses.
I would think Physics at UChicago would set you up nicely for a quant job. I think they even have a large quant trading club and I see Physics/Math/Stats majors. Impressive club!
What’s the purpose of going all the way with a major as hard as physics to get a quant job? Just do math or economics and you’ll have a much easier time explaining why you even did the degree you did.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The education is top notch and work ethic instilled translates well to employment.
Employment in everything but engineering, correct?
Apart from molecular engineering, UChicago doesn’t have engineering at all.
It's an econ school, why does it need engineering?
UChicago is great for humanities, social sciences, math, physics. Fully agree that there is no need for engineering.
One third majoring in econ by graduation.
It may be because Math/Physics/Stats/Engineering is so hard...it's the default
Uchicago economics is very very hard. It’s because economics has the best outcomes coming out of college. A physics degree is almost entirely useless if you aren’t spending most of your time in other courses.
I would think Physics at UChicago would set you up nicely for a quant job. I think they even have a large quant trading club and I see Physics/Math/Stats majors. Impressive club!
You need to take a lot of outside courses for quant. Quant is not as simple as people here make it. You need to 1) actually know how to code for heavens sake 2) be able to compete with mathematical economics majors who have a lot more applicable knowledge base (and frankly easier courses with more time on their hands), and 3) you actually have to get passed the insane interview process. Quant is not some easy job you stumble into; students prep for months and there’s very few jobs.
Physics uses a particular branch of mathematics. Some of which is useful, but it makes much more sense to take a stats major.
No, the bizecon track is not very hard at all.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The education is top notch and work ethic instilled translates well to employment.
Employment in everything but engineering, correct?
Apart from molecular engineering, UChicago doesn’t have engineering at all.
It's an econ school, why does it need engineering?
UChicago is great for humanities, social sciences, math, physics. Fully agree that there is no need for engineering.
One third majoring in econ by graduation.
It may be because Math/Physics/Stats/Engineering is so hard...it's the default
Uchicago economics is very very hard.
Anonymous wrote:School appears in various rankings on this forum. There's ED0(??). Looking for students' experiences from the last 3 years or so. The good, the bad and ugly. Why NOT Chicago?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do people know who’s at the “bottom” of the top 10%?
The cum laude kids (top 10 percent) were announced in order of GPA.
That’s awful and so unnecessary. Shame on the school. More humane to announce them in alphabetical order. Just my opinion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do people know who’s at the “bottom” of the top 10%?
The cum laude kids (top 10 percent) were announced in order of GPA.
That’s awful and so unnecessary. Shame on the school. More humane to announce them in alphabetical order. Just my opinion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do people know who’s at the “bottom” of the top 10%?
The cum laude kids (top 10 percent) were announced in order of GPA.