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Is there an MBA. graduate, doctorate crowd here on GAF?

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I'm thinking about maybe doing a Phd in economics. My college has a joint masters + undergraduate degree program. Would doing that affect whether or not I get into a phd program from a better institution down the line?
 
I would say 90% of MS/PhD candidates I know have TA or RA positions that cover tuition and pay them a stipend. I am in chemical/biological sciences though; we basically work 40-80 hours a week in a lab conducting research. I'll wrap up my PhD by the end of next year and walk away with more money than when I came in back in 2011.

On sciences and engineering? Sure. MBA? Better hope your employer is footing the bill. Law or Medicine? Nope. Humanities? I have no idea.
 
Im only in my second quarter of my mba program but I am enjoying being an a/a minus student again. I'll be 20 percent done with my mba by the end of february. Wish I could finish it quicker but my company only pays 15k a year max for it so ill just take it slow.
 
On sciences and engineering? Sure. MBA? Better hope your employer is footing the bill. Law or Medicine? Nope. Humanities? I have no idea.

In the social sciences, PhD positions are given stipends+tuition wavers, sometimes attached to TA/RAship; standalone MAs, where they still exist, are generally not covered but people can apply for TA/RA positions to help defer.
 
Sure, as long as he has good grades and lab experience as an undergrad, most programs prefer BS to Masters students actually

her gpa is probably a 3.5 (she only made As and Bs as an udnergrad) and i'm unsure about lab experience but she was required to conduct and present research under the guidance of a mentor and second reader

would she need to take an admittance test like the GRE for master's students? or just apply if her gpa meets the minimum? thanks again
 
a friend of mine is interested in going from a BS biology straight to a bio PhD. is that possible?

It is absolutely possible and often preferred. Professors like knowing they've got a student for 4+ years as opposed to only 2 years as it takes time to training a student to become a competent researcher.

her gpa is probably a 3.5 (she only made As and Bs as an udnergrad) and i'm unsure about lab experience but she was required to conduct and present research under the guidance of a mentor and second reader

would she need to take an admittance test like the GRE for master's students? or just apply if her gpa meets the minimum? thanks again

Depends on the school. Most decent schools will require the GRE in my opinion, Masters or Ph.D.
 
In the social sciences, PhD positions are given stipends+tuition wavers, sometimes attached to TA/RAship; standalone MAs, where they still exist, are generally not covered but people can apply for TA/RA positions to help defer.

On another topic, why are standalone MAs disappearing? Is this a recent trend?
 
Well flying off soon to do a medical school interview in Minneapolis on Friday. Wish med schools did phone or Skype interviews sometimes :( that $$$.
 
Met with the technology and communications coverage groups as well as the M&A product group of my top IBank selection yesterday. Highly likely I will accept their offer.

I went in thinking I'd rank them 1) M&A 2) Tech 3) Comm

Came out thinking 1) Comm 2) M&A 3) Tech. I've cut tech from consideration.

M&A would have the prestige and I would learn a ton, but Comm would have the better people fit and it fit my industry interests the most. Also the Comm group does more of its own M&A work and doesn't assign as much to the M&A group, which means a lot of learning but terrible hours (even by banking standards). It also means I wouldn't get to do much of the Comm M&A work while in M&A. The bank's Comm group is seen as one of the best Comm groups on the street, but the bank's M&A group is seen as the best group at the bank.

M&A I would need to wait until May for sorting and I would be in a pool of 15 in which 5 would be selected. There is a chance I don't get it and end up with an undesirable group. Comm is only looking for people now, but I could get a spot.

M&A is better when thinking about next steps in career, but no idea how much better than Comm.

How do I go about figuring out which to choose?
 
I'll be starting my Mastering in International Business in September. It's a one year program, I'm hoping that will help save a bit of money.
 
I have MSc in Social Sciences, but having a master's degree isn't anything special over here.

Unfortunately, just having "A Master's degree" isn't anything special in most places anymore >.>


For clarity: Obviously plenty of Master's degrees are very special/worthwhile, depending on the degree.
But, simply being able to say "I have a Master's degree," not so much.
 
Unfortunately, just having "A Master's degree" isn't anything special in most places anymore >.>


For clarity: Obviously plenty of Master's degrees are very special/worthwhile, depending on the degree.
But, simply being able to say "I have a Master's degree," not so much.

I'm a Pricing Analyst in the oil and gas field so it can be pretty competitive. I'm not looking for new jobs but I keep my eye on the market. Having an MBA is almost always listed as preferred on job listings I see. I'll take any leg up I can get against the competition lol.
 
I'm a Pricing Analyst in the oil and gas field so it can be pretty competitive. I'm not looking for new jobs but I keep my eye on the market. Having an MBA is almost always listed as preferred on job listings I see. I'll take any leg up I can get against the competition lol.

Well, yeah, as I said, certain degrees are definitely special/worthwhile, especially depending on one's field.

But it used to be that saying "I have a Master's degree" was an impressive thing regardless of if it was in Education (mine), English. History, Communications, General Studies, GAF Browsing, or whatever else. And I would say that's definitely not the case anymore.
 
Thanks guys, its been a crazy process, I'm so happy its finally done. I'm finally going through my game backlog for like the past 3 years now.



Post-MBA IB associates:

Associate-PNG.png


http://www.ibankinginsider.com/on-the-job/investment-banking-salary-total-pay/

These numbers are a bit out-dated, the base has shifted upward so that the high reflects the median, and the bonus matches in a typical good year. Most leave after 2-4 years though. These amounts reflect bulge bracket. Elite boutiques pay more, small boutiques can vary widely but often pay less.

Did your friend come from Stern MBA or undergrad?


He did his undergrad at Sterns - not sure if he went back to get his masters.
I'm trying to get in contact with him as I haven't spoken to him in years.

I don't know if it's work culture, but last I heard he's being partying a lot and has gotten in the more hardcore drugs.
 
He did his undergrad at Sterns - not sure if he went back to get his masters.
I'm trying to get in contact with him as I haven't spoken to him in years.

I don't know if it's work culture, but last I heard he's being partying a lot and has gotten in the more hardcore drugs.

My sister got her MBA from Yale back in 2008 and has been doing IB since then. She works about 100 hr weeks as VP and her total compensation last year was around 450k. Just to give you an example.
 
My sister got her MBA from Yale back in 2008 and has been doing IB since then. She works about 100 hr weeks as VP and her total compensation last year was around 450k. Just to give you an example.

A little over 6 years into her career, so on the cusp of being promoted to director most likely. That amount sounds fair, around the average. She also probably had her compensation impacted by working through the tough years of the recession. Was she at a bulge bracket or boutique? Cover an industry (e.g. healthcare) or a product (e.g. M&A)?
 
A little over 6 years into her career, so on the cusp of being promoted to director most likely. That amount sounds fair, around the average. She also probably had her compensation impacted by working through the tough years of the recession. Was she at a bulge bracket or boutique? Cover an industry (e.g. healthcare) or a product (e.g. M&A)?

She covers retail.
 
Well, yeah, as I said, certain degrees are definitely special/worthwhile, especially depending on one's field.

But it used to be that saying "I have a Master's degree" was an impressive thing regardless of if it was in Education (mine), English. History, Communications, General Studies, GAF Browsing, or whatever else. And I would say that's definitely not the case anymore.

Is it impressive to have a PHD?
 
Is it impressive to have a PHD?

Well, I mean, at that point, it does depend somewhat on what one is doing, I'm sure.

I always joked around when I was working in retail and working on my PhD, that after finishing it, I would say to customers, "Hello, my name is Dr. terrisus! Welcome to Best Buy!"
Obviously retail is a bit of an extreme example, but I would think it come up as a negative unless one were in a specifically related field (which, of course, is the point).

Even in the more general case though, I know there has been talk lately about "too many" people getting PhDs, and them being "more common" and such (which I would've been the perfect example of someone just spending a whole bunch of time in school and ending up with a PhD).

But, yeah, unless one is going into a field where it's really disproportionate (like, say, retail sales at the lower levels >.>), I would imagine there's still a decent amount of "impress" in it, even without getting into the details of what it was in. But that may just be me.
 
A little over 6 years into her career, so on the cusp of being promoted to director most likely. That amount sounds fair, around the average. She also probably had her compensation impacted by working through the tough years of the recession. Was she at a bulge bracket or boutique? Cover an industry (e.g. healthcare) or a product (e.g. M&A)?

Aaaaand your right, she just got promoted to Executive Director yesterday.
 
So, I'm taking 2 courses this semester as a listener at my University, along with statistics courses/specializations/professional certificates online at Coursera and Duke. I thought I was ready for this load of work, the online courses have been very easy for me and I consider(ed) myself to have enough mathematical maturity to take on semi-advanced topics with relative ease. I was so confident on myself that I was seriously considering in doing an online Masters in Statistics as a side project from my PhD research on Theoretical Computer Sciences (maths lite :P). The only thing that stopped me was the recent surge on the dollar exchange rate, so i opted for professional certificates instead on the field.

But now, one of the courses has hit me with a hard doses of reality: Stochastic Processes I, which started with a brief introduction to Martingales and Brownian Motion. I'm not new to the concepts used, I have studied concepts like Borel measurable sets, Lebesgue, Hilbert and Hausdorff spaces, Radon–Nikodym derivatives, etc. before. But the way the professor expects us to dominate them is blowing me away atm and I'm certainly having trouble following the lectures, and we only had three lectures so far! A blow to my self-stem certainly, which I had to build up reconstruct recently :( .

Anyone had to go through a similar situation?
 
Yes...
Yes...
I know some of those words...

Seriously, I felt hopeless during my Bachelor's in Mathematics, that somehow surviving that and then doing a Master's in Education was a breeze.

All I can say is good luck, and you're a much better man than I >.>
 
Pedagogy, educational theories, child development, special education requirements, various courses more tuned to subject like children's literature or teaching mathematics
(which was actually an academic challenge for some of them >.>)
, just kind of a hodgepodge really, capped off with student teaching, and an "action research project" in the classroom.

It really was a breeze, frankly >.>
 
Got an A on my thesis, woot! I guess I'm pretty much done with my MBA not counting the walk. Gonna spend 2 weeks in Spain and Portugal and fly to Norway from there for the Graduation in May!
 
Aaaaand your right, she just got promoted to Executive Director yesterday.

Congrats to her, that's pretty big. She will have a lot more responsibility for bringing in new business now. She also probably crossed the 500k threshold, and a lot more of her pay will be based on business brought in.

Is she thinking about exit opps now that year end bonuses and promotions have happened? What is she considering, if so?
 
Tough but interesting semester this time around. Diverse set of subjects ranging from Finance to Business Law. But a lot of work and on top of it got sick last week :S Have a lot to catch up on next week
 
anyone here know masters in management? for the uninitiated, it's pretty much just MBA-lite, for those who want to go straight from undergrad to masters ordon't have the experience/money for an MBA.in certain European countries it's subsidized so you can pretty much do one for free.

anyway, I'm going for a CEMS course, which is basically an organization that awards an extra degree on top of a normal masters in management. you need to have some proficiency in 3 languages to apply, which technically i didn't have when i got interested, only had Chinese and English. and i had to pass a Chinese test as well. managed to do that easily enough, then just crammed Spanish for 2 months to get to the required level - which was fairly basic, A2 on the CEFR framework, but still stressed me out a bit. passed that in the end, then got the certificate about 2 days before the application deadline.

now i wait 2 weeks to find out if all that effort was even worth it.
 
Congrats to her, that's pretty big. She will have a lot more responsibility for bringing in new business now. She also probably crossed the 500k threshold, and a lot more of her pay will be based on business brought in.

Is she thinking about exit opps now that year end bonuses and promotions have happened? What is she considering, if so?

Not sure. Possibly early retirement in order to do her own thing.
 
Uhm, consider me a skeptic..
I don't really place any value in mba done as fresh graduate.. After you build some real world experience, sure.. But as a fresh graduate, you should go through the usual swim-or-sink drill for a few years..
Imho :)
 
Uhm, consider me a skeptic..
I don't really place any value in mba done as fresh graduate.. After you build some real world experience, sure.. But as a fresh graduate, you should go through the usual swim-or-sink drill for a few years..
Imho :)

I would generally agree with you. Business schools expect you to reflect on prior work experiences during your program. They ask you to bring your own experience to the classroom to share with other students. At elite programs, you will have a very tough time getting in (significantly lower acceptance rates than the already very low ones normal candidates face). Without that experience, you are likely to be well behind your peers, and admissions committees understand that.

A few extremely talented people can be accepted to programs, but the experience is wasted on them. There is a Stanford grad in my program (one of about 3 who were allowed to join straight out of undergrad into the MBA program) who is exceptionally talented but did not do well during the recruiting process. Recruiters seeking MBAs are seeking people with around 3 to 6 years of work experience. Had this Stanford grad done something else for 3 years and then come to business school, she could have chosen any investment bank she wanted to work at. Instead, she had to settle with one at the bottom of the bulge bracket. Is she better off by saving years but ending up with a lower tier employer? I'm not sure. My initial inclination is no, but I guess time will tell.
 
guess I haven't posted in this thread, but I just started my PhD in biomedical engineering. yay 4 more years of school lol

Hey I'm applying for a PhD in biomed! How is it looking? I should be hearing back from a few schools myself...

Anyways, I was hoping to get some advice, and I think this thread could help. A few days ago I had a phone interview with someone from a school I applied to. I think it went OK (not great), but there was one question I may have messed up. The question was something along the lines of "A PhD in engineering or applied math can be a completely miserable experience for 6 years of your life. Why would you want to go through with that?"

How would some of you answer this question? I talked about how much I liked learning, and mentioned that if I wasn't challenged, I'd be bored. I also talked about why I really enjoy the field I've chosen. But I don't know. I feel like I messed that one up.
 
So, I just got back home today from my first conference. It was a pretty awesome experience, there were researchers from all around the world with lots of interesting presentations. I spent about half the time thinking "damn, I wish I worked on something that cool".

I also presented a paper based on my final year undergraduate project (I was only of of two guys to present a paper like that, everyone else was at least doing a PhD). The wait before the presentation was pretty nerve wracking but it ended up going pretty well as soon as I started speaking.

I know you're supposed to use opportunities like this to network as much as possible, but I had lots of trouble doing so. I got about 3 contacts but out of 100 attendees that's pretty bad I guess. It's pretty hard to discuss people's research when you don't really have good background knowledge in their area.

Somehow I ended up getting a prize for best paper though, which really surprised me. I'm not complaining (I'm really happy about it) but I'm at a bit of a loss as to why it was selected, since I thought beforehand that most other papers I've read were better/had more research significance.
 
Got into Carnegie Mellon's Tepper School of Business with a 50% scholarship so atleast I know I'm going somewhere. This process is the most heartwrenching....
 
Got into Carnegie Mellon's Tepper School of Business with a 50% scholarship so atleast I know I'm going somewhere. This process is the most heartwrenching....

Congrats! Great program that's well respected for its quant focus.

Any other schools you're waiting to hear from?
 
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