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How much education do you have (poll)? (1 Viewer)

How much education do you have?

  • None.

    Votes: 4 1.1%
  • GED.

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • HS Diploma

    Votes: 31 8.6%
  • Associates Degree

    Votes: 21 5.8%
  • Bachelors Degree

    Votes: 139 38.6%
  • Masters Degree

    Votes: 104 28.9%
  • Doctorates Degree

    Votes: 52 14.4%
  • Trade / Vocational Certification

    Votes: 9 2.5%

  • Total voters
    360
Lol @ 80% of the posters having a BA or higher.

Whats the general population? I think its like 30%. We really are a big bunch of smart asses.
Educational attainment in the United States, Age 25 and Over

Education Percentage

High school graduate 87.65%

Some college 57.28%

Associate's and/or Bachelor's degree 40.58%

Bachelor's degree 30.94%

Master's degree 8.05%

Doctorate or professional degree 3.07%

 
Lol @ 80% of the posters having a BA or higher.

Whats the general population? I think its like 30%. We really are a big bunch of smart asses.
Educational attainment in the United States, Age 25 and Over

Education Percentage

High school graduate 87.65%

Some college 57.28%

Associate's and/or Bachelor's degree 40.58%

Bachelor's degree 30.94%

Master's degree 8.05%

Doctorate or professional degree 3.07%
I wonder what the rate for men is.

Loaded question, possibly MRA, but I'll bet it's smaller than 40%.

 
40% with a 4 year college degree, another 40% with a Masters or PhD, and then you've got the creme dela creme like me from The U so this place is a who's who of movers and shakers in the world.

 
Lol @ 80% of the posters having a BA or higher.

Whats the general population? I think its like 30%. We really are a big bunch of smart asses.
Educational attainment in the United States, Age 25 and Over

Education Percentage

High school graduate 87.65%

Some college 57.28%

Associate's and/or Bachelor's degree 40.58%

Bachelor's degree 30.94%

Master's degree 8.05%

Doctorate or professional degree 3.07%
Hulk must have graduated from Miles College.

 
BSBA in both Finance and Risk Management. Though it is not a degree I am CPA which requires more schooling. A couple classes away from completing my Master of Science in Predictive Analytics.

I also work in research, specifically survey research. I can confirm the bias reduction Em made up is not valid.
Sounds interesting, what is that like?
Its through Northwestern. Basically a hybrid of stats, MBA, and IT. The easiest comparison is applied statistics. Hits OLS, logistic regression, econometrics, time series, survival analysis, etc. Code in SAS and R primarily. Incredibly addictive and time consuming on top of FT work and 2 kids under 2. Would recommend if you are in a related field.

 
BSBA in both Finance and Risk Management. Though it is not a degree I am CPA which requires more schooling. A couple classes away from completing my Master of Science in Predictive Analytics.

I also work in research, specifically survey research. I can confirm the bias reduction Em made up is not valid.
Sounds interesting, what is that like?
Its through Northwestern. Basically a hybrid of stats, MBA, and IT. The easiest comparison is applied statistics. Hits OLS, logistic regression, econometrics, time series, survival analysis, etc. Code in SAS and R primarily. Incredibly addictive and time consuming on top of FT work and 2 kids under 2. Would recommend if you are in a related field.
This degree and a linguistics degree are approximately the most fascinating things in the world. I could seriously sit down and listen to discussion on predictive analytics for hours.
 
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BSBA in both Finance and Risk Management. Though it is not a degree I am CPA which requires more schooling. A couple classes away from completing my Master of Science in Predictive Analytics.

I also work in research, specifically survey research. I can confirm the bias reduction Em made up is not valid.
Sounds interesting, what is that like?
Its through Northwestern. Basically a hybrid of stats, MBA, and IT. The easiest comparison is applied statistics. Hits OLS, logistic regression, econometrics, time series, survival analysis, etc. Code in SAS and R primarily. Incredibly addictive and time consuming on top of FT work and 2 kids under 2. Would recommend if you are in a related field.
This degree and a linguistics degree are approximately the most fascinating things in the world. I could seriously sit down and listen to discussion on predictive analytics for hours.
The applicability of it is unlimited. It basically is the next step in statistics. The understanding of fitting a line to a dataset is not too difficult. Being able to take data, transform it to an exponent or a a natural log or a binary variable to get a more accurate result and then take that to forecast ten periods ahead all while taking into account inflation seasonal trends etc. is insanely fascinating.

 
Half this board is lawyers. I refuse to claim that a JD is a doctorate, since that's an insult to the PhDs. Fix your pole

 
MBA. Also have my CPA, although my wife says it stands for Car Parking Attendant. :(

Been in accounting for almost 20 years with 3 of those in audit. Thinking about taking the CFE exam as well...

 
BSBA in both Finance and Risk Management. Though it is not a degree I am CPA which requires more schooling. A couple classes away from completing my Master of Science in Predictive Analytics.

I also work in research, specifically survey research. I can confirm the bias reduction Em made up is not valid.
Sounds interesting, what is that like?
Its through Northwestern. Basically a hybrid of stats, MBA, and IT. The easiest comparison is applied statistics. Hits OLS, logistic regression, econometrics, time series, survival analysis, etc. Code in SAS and R primarily. Incredibly addictive and time consuming on top of FT work and 2 kids under 2. Would recommend if you are in a related field.
This degree and a linguistics degree are approximately the most fascinating things in the world. I could seriously sit down and listen to discussion on predictive analytics for hours.
The applicability of it is unlimited. It basically is the next step in statistics. The understanding of fitting a line to a dataset is not too difficult. Being able to take data, transform it to an exponent or a a natural log or a binary variable to get a more accurate result and then take that to forecast ten periods ahead all while taking into account inflation seasonal trends etc. is insanely fascinating.
I have many questions and a career path suggestion. My only request is that you consider making me your partner.

 
BSBA in both Finance and Risk Management. Though it is not a degree I am CPA which requires more schooling. A couple classes away from completing my Master of Science in Predictive Analytics.

I also work in research, specifically survey research. I can confirm the bias reduction Em made up is not valid.
Sounds interesting, what is that like?
Its through Northwestern. Basically a hybrid of stats, MBA, and IT. The easiest comparison is applied statistics. Hits OLS, logistic regression, econometrics, time series, survival analysis, etc. Code in SAS and R primarily. Incredibly addictive and time consuming on top of FT work and 2 kids under 2. Would recommend if you are in a related field.
This degree and a linguistics degree are approximately the most fascinating things in the world. I could seriously sit down and listen to discussion on predictive analytics for hours.
The applicability of it is unlimited. It basically is the next step in statistics. The understanding of fitting a line to a dataset is not too difficult. Being able to take data, transform it to an exponent or a a natural log or a binary variable to get a more accurate result and then take that to forecast ten periods ahead all while taking into account inflation seasonal trends etc. is insanely fascinating.
I have many questions and a career path suggestion. My only request is that you consider making me your partner.
I'm happy to answer any questions and am open to suggestions. I cannot complain about my current job and pay which the degree is applicable...to some extent.

 
BSBA in both Finance and Risk Management. Though it is not a degree I am CPA which requires more schooling. A couple classes away from completing my Master of Science in Predictive Analytics.

I also work in research, specifically survey research. I can confirm the bias reduction Em made up is not valid.
Sounds interesting, what is that like?
Its through Northwestern. Basically a hybrid of stats, MBA, and IT. The easiest comparison is applied statistics. Hits OLS, logistic regression, econometrics, time series, survival analysis, etc. Code in SAS and R primarily. Incredibly addictive and time consuming on top of FT work and 2 kids under 2. Would recommend if you are in a related field.
Through Northwestern online?

I am actually in a pretty related field and use SAS daily.

 
BSBA in both Finance and Risk Management. Though it is not a degree I am CPA which requires more schooling. A couple classes away from completing my Master of Science in Predictive Analytics.

I also work in research, specifically survey research. I can confirm the bias reduction Em made up is not valid.
Sounds interesting, what is that like?
Its through Northwestern. Basically a hybrid of stats, MBA, and IT. The easiest comparison is applied statistics. Hits OLS, logistic regression, econometrics, time series, survival analysis, etc. Code in SAS and R primarily. Incredibly addictive and time consuming on top of FT work and 2 kids under 2. Would recommend if you are in a related field.
This degree and a linguistics degree are approximately the most fascinating things in the world. I could seriously sit down and listen to discussion on predictive analytics for hours.
The applicability of it is unlimited. It basically is the next step in statistics. The understanding of fitting a line to a dataset is not too difficult. Being able to take data, transform it to an exponent or a a natural log or a binary variable to get a more accurate result and then take that to forecast ten periods ahead all while taking into account inflation seasonal trends etc. is insanely fascinating.
I have many questions and a career path suggestion. My only request is that you consider making me your partner.
I'm happy to answer any questions and am open to suggestions. I cannot complain about my current job and pay which the degree is applicable...to some extent.
I'm absolutely certain you have a better job, and am 90% kidding, but wish to God I could find someone with your qualifications to do jury research with.

 
BSBA in both Finance and Risk Management. Though it is not a degree I am CPA which requires more schooling. A couple classes away from completing my Master of Science in Predictive Analytics.

I also work in research, specifically survey research. I can confirm the bias reduction Em made up is not valid.
Sounds interesting, what is that like?
Its through Northwestern. Basically a hybrid of stats, MBA, and IT. The easiest comparison is applied statistics. Hits OLS, logistic regression, econometrics, time series, survival analysis, etc. Code in SAS and R primarily. Incredibly addictive and time consuming on top of FT work and 2 kids under 2. Would recommend if you are in a related field.
Through Northwestern online?

I am actually in a pretty related field and use SAS daily.
Yes. Its an online program that is for those with applicable work experience and/or background. I know "online" can have a negative attachment in some cases, but they are not handing out degrees. The degree is from Northwestern with no caveats and the classes average 18-20 hrs a week a piece. For those who work and/or have a family, its tough to take more than one class (or even one). 11 classes total so 2 3/4 years to complete.Its a great experience but very challenging. Will be happy to answer any questions about the program if you are interested.

 
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I have mail order degrees in financeology and real estateonomy.

ETA - serious answer = I have 2 MBA degrees.

 
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MBA. Also have my CPA, although my wife says it stands for Car Parking Attendant. :(

Been in accounting for almost 20 years with 3 of those in audit. Thinking about taking the CFE exam as well...
No one cares about your CPA until they have a tax question that affects their bottom line. Then, you're their best friend (regardless of if you've ever professionally worked on a tax return in your life or not, lots of different jobs for people in accounting that might never involve professional tax preparation).

 
BSBA in both Finance and Risk Management. Though it is not a degree I am CPA which requires more schooling. A couple classes away from completing my Master of Science in Predictive Analytics.

I also work in research, specifically survey research. I can confirm the bias reduction Em made up is not valid.
Sounds interesting, what is that like?
Its through Northwestern. Basically a hybrid of stats, MBA, and IT. The easiest comparison is applied statistics. Hits OLS, logistic regression, econometrics, time series, survival analysis, etc. Code in SAS and R primarily. Incredibly addictive and time consuming on top of FT work and 2 kids under 2. Would recommend if you are in a related field.
This degree and a linguistics degree are approximately the most fascinating things in the world. I could seriously sit down and listen to discussion on predictive analytics for hours.
The applicability of it is unlimited. It basically is the next step in statistics. The understanding of fitting a line to a dataset is not too difficult. Being able to take data, transform it to an exponent or a a natural log or a binary variable to get a more accurate result and then take that to forecast ten periods ahead all while taking into account inflation seasonal trends etc. is insanely fascinating.
I have many questions and a career path suggestion. My only request is that you consider making me your partner.
I'm happy to answer any questions and am open to suggestions. I cannot complain about my current job and pay which the degree is applicable...to some extent.
I'm absolutely certain you have a better job, and am 90% kidding, but wish to God I could find someone with your qualifications to do jury research with.
Could be a side gig in the future, but the ability to do it would drastically depend on the information you have on each jury member. As a non-lawyer, I am not sure what is the extent of this data.
 
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I've completed some college and completed broadcasting trade school. I can't stay focused enough to go back to school, though.

 
The applicability of it is unlimited. It basically is the next step in statistics. The understanding of fitting a line to a dataset is not too difficult. Being able to take data, transform it to an exponent or a a natural log or a binary variable to get a more accurate result and then take that to forecast ten periods ahead all while taking into account inflation seasonal trends etc. is insanely fascinating.
Do you use any tools other than SAS? I manage a BI team and we use standard reporting/analytics tools but recently rolled out Tableau (which has R integration) and we have plans to do some predictive POCs later this year. We have some business teams that use SAS now but they are isolated groups.

 
The applicability of it is unlimited. It basically is the next step in statistics. The understanding of fitting a line to a dataset is not too difficult. Being able to take data, transform it to an exponent or a a natural log or a binary variable to get a more accurate result and then take that to forecast ten periods ahead all while taking into account inflation seasonal trends etc. is insanely fascinating.
Do you use any tools other than SAS? I manage a BI team and we use standard reporting/analytics tools but recently rolled out Tableau (which has R integration) and we have plans to do some predictive POCs later this year. We have some business teams that use SAS now but they are isolated groups.
SAS and R are the key systems we use with a little SPSS thrown in.ETA- during my time in the program there has been a shift more towards R in the curriculum. R being open sourced has tons of advantages which includes customization and of course being free...instead of $10,000+ per person for some software licenses.

 
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BobbyLayne said:
I've just finished my doctoral degree (DBA with a concentration in Accounting) ...getting the last sign-offs this week, in fact.

"Readiness for Change and Perceptions of the Learning Organization in Public Accounting Firms" was the dissertation.
you should post this somewhere...sounds very interesting (ex Andersen employee).
:no:

Take it to the test forum, nerds.

(PwC alum)
PwC here as well (well, way back when it was PW). And I took it to the PMs ...leaves more time here to get blown away by xulf's stuff.

 
xulf said:
AAABatteries said:
xulf said:
The applicability of it is unlimited. It basically is the next step in statistics. The understanding of fitting a line to a dataset is not too difficult. Being able to take data, transform it to an exponent or a a natural log or a binary variable to get a more accurate result and then take that to forecast ten periods ahead all while taking into account inflation seasonal trends etc. is insanely fascinating.
Do you use any tools other than SAS? I manage a BI team and we use standard reporting/analytics tools but recently rolled out Tableau (which has R integration) and we have plans to do some predictive POCs later this year. We have some business teams that use SAS now but they are isolated groups.
SAS and R are the key systems we use with a little SPSS thrown in.ETA- during my time in the program there has been a shift more towards R in the curriculum. R being open sourced has tons of advantages which includes customization and of course being free...instead of $10,000+ per person for some software licenses.
I do similar work, exclusively in R/Python. SAS is bad and SPSS is worse.

 
jon_mx said:
Steve Tasker said:
I have a totally unnecessary MBA.
I once thought about an MBA. But thankfully that thought went away.
75% of our senior leadership team (CEO, President, SVP of Sales, SVP of Product Management, etc) do not have masters degrees. For the great majority of people your undergrad is your ticket in the game, and then it's all based on performance. If you produce at a high level people could care less about advanced degrees. Not saying I wouldn't want a Harvard/Stanford/Wharton type MBA. Would have accelerated my career. But now I'm across the table with all of those private equity people from those schools holding my own. Osmosis is great...
 
TheIronSheik said:
Em should really listen to me. Unlike most of the FBGers, I don't have a degree. Yet I was able to rise up and elevate myself to FBG status through hard work and dedication.

I worked as a bartender. I made connections doing so. I took jobs that didn't pay much to start but got my foot in the door. Almost anyone can go work at a call center as a help desk analyst. It doesn't pay much, but it'll get you in the door.

I remember that even though I drank and partied in my 20's, I spent almost every moment I wasn't working or partying reading books that would teach me new things. I became friends with people who could further my career or teach me things that helped me.

With nothing more than a high school diploma, I have made an amazing career for myself. And at no time did I ever have a "get rich quick" scheme for an idea. My "get rich quick" scheme was hard work.

Instead of trying to learn day trading in penny stocks, you should be buying books on coding or database administration. And instead of getting high and playing Crash Bandicoot, you should be reading these books and learning life skills.

Success doesn't come easy. If it did, everyone would be rich. There's a reason most of the country is poor. It's because they are all waiting for success to be given to them or holding out for their "get rich quick" plan to finally start working.

Wake up. Life is passing you by.
Solid advice here. Getting a degree is nice, but if you're willing to bust your butt you can make it without one.

 
BobbyLayne said:
I've just finished my doctoral degree (DBA with a concentration in Accounting) ...getting the last sign-offs this week, in fact.

"Readiness for Change and Perceptions of the Learning Organization in Public Accounting Firms" was the dissertation.
you should post this somewhere...sounds very interesting (ex Andersen employee).
:no:

Take it to the test forum, nerds.

(PwC alum)
PwC here as well (well, way back when it was PW). And I took it to the PMs ...leaves more time here to get blown away by xulf's stuff.
I'm a CPA too, so feel free to nerd it up with accounting fun :shrug:

 
AAABatteries said:
xulf said:
The applicability of it is unlimited. It basically is the next step in statistics. The understanding of fitting a line to a dataset is not too difficult. Being able to take data, transform it to an exponent or a a natural log or a binary variable to get a more accurate result and then take that to forecast ten periods ahead all while taking into account inflation seasonal trends etc. is insanely fascinating.
Do you use any tools other than SAS? I manage a BI team and we use standard reporting/analytics tools but recently rolled out Tableau (which has R integration) and we have plans to do some predictive POCs later this year. We have some business teams that use SAS now but they are isolated groups.
We actually use SAS and Tableau together a decent bit.

 
BobbyLayne said:
I've just finished my doctoral degree (DBA with a concentration in Accounting) ...getting the last sign-offs this week, in fact.

"Readiness for Change and Perceptions of the Learning Organization in Public Accounting Firms" was the dissertation.
you should post this somewhere...sounds very interesting (ex Andersen employee).
:no: Take it to the test forum, nerds.

(PwC alum)
PwC here as well (well, way back when it was PW). And I took it to the PMs ...leaves more time here to get blown away by xulf's stuff.
Legacy C&L, 2 years prior and 2 years after the merger. Will never forget the quote from the Coopers managing partner for EU to his colleagues in a private meeting (that somehow ended up on pg 1 WSJ) on the cultural differences. "Price is a very white shoe, starched underwear kind of firm. Coopers guys, on the other hand, tend to go commando."

 

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