What else do you want to know? No one can talk about the degree with a great deal of knowledge because no one has done it yet.back on topic please.....
What else do you want to know? No one can talk about the degree with a great deal of knowledge because no one has done it yet.back on topic please.....
What else do you want to know? No one can talk about the degree with a great deal of knowledge because no one has done it yet.
Not exactly.The majors that are arguably good combinations with actuarial are arguably Finance, Economics and Mathematics (Statistics), possibly Accounting too.
Those majors will be the only ones that will be offered as part of the B Actuarial Studies program.
As for you, perhaps the above combinations don't really matter because they can get you into IB or actuarial anyway.
As for me it looks like I'll be taking the unconventional combo of Actuarial, Chinese and HRM ~ risk taking to see where I'll end up working....
You get two to three placements in your degree. Instead of being 3 years, your degree is 4 (2 placements) or 4.5 (3 placements) years long. The placements are semester long (6 months) and occur at various points in your degree. You only work in that time (i.e. you aren't at university).hi thanks...
okay i would like to know when do you work in a coop. I mean do you work part time.......
and what is often the starting salary of a person who as completed a coop as opposed to a person doing a normal degree
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Are you talking about ACTL3005?Not exactly.
I have checked course outlines of third year actuarial studies and it looks like it covers the same stuff as in finance. There is a third year actuarial elective that covers a ton of stuff that is contained in FINS1612 - Capital Markets , FINS2624 - Portfolio Management , FINS3636 - Interest Rate Risk Management , FINS3635 - Options, Futures & Risk Mgmt.
In one sense you are somewhat disadvantaging yourself as you don't cover a lot of content. Sure, take actuarial/finance if you want to have a relatively cruisy life in your later years where everything is just revision. You would probably learn more if you did actuarial/economics or actuarial/accounting.
No, ACTL3004 Financial Economics. Basically, it looks like the first half of the course is similiar to FINS2624 and then the remainder of the course is similiar to FINS3635 and FINS3636. It probably goes into more mathematical detail than the finance courses, but it is still fundamentally the same stuff.Are you talking about ACTL3005?
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