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Well, as of yesterday, my university (Lehigh) just decided to deny me entry into financial calculus, even though I have all of the requirements and the ability, simply because I'm not in the analytical finance program. Never mind all of my AP classes and the fact that undergrads can't earn a master's degree no matter how hard they try (can only pass up 12 of 30 credits as free electives from undergrad), but now I'm denied a course the professor knew I wanted in for more than a year.
Bastards. Anyhoo, I was wondering...is it even remotely possible for someone like me with a very applied engineering background to just learn the material well enough from buying some random book?
So far, I've taken all of the undergraduate probability at my university (theory of probability, random processes top them out) and have done well enough (C+ and B, the uglier grade occurring because it was literally my first time with proofs so I struggled very much early). Now I'm just wondering "now what"?
I feel that with this sort of financial engineering background, that that is the only way I can continue having fun solving analytical problems for a living...
Bastards. Anyhoo, I was wondering...is it even remotely possible for someone like me with a very applied engineering background to just learn the material well enough from buying some random book?
So far, I've taken all of the undergraduate probability at my university (theory of probability, random processes top them out) and have done well enough (C+ and B, the uglier grade occurring because it was literally my first time with proofs so I struggled very much early). Now I'm just wondering "now what"?
I feel that with this sort of financial engineering background, that that is the only way I can continue having fun solving analytical problems for a living...