Name one accredited U.S. business school that teaches TA as a course.
Thanks,
Hampton
I think I listed 22 out of 45.
Surf asked that question too and when I posted the info...he didn't say anything. There's schools like University of Texas, Carnegie Mellon University, University of Richmond, University of Rhode Island, UC Irvine. McMaster University, George Washington University, Bentley University, Ball State University, MIT (many more)...
I believe I only listed the ones that actually showed photos of their state of the art
trading rooms and that had sponsors from some of the top financial firms. Not sure at what level the TA is taught. Many many years ago I did attend (as a visitor) a class taught about GAPs at the University of Texas by Julia Dalquist. It was basically regurgitated stuff you'll find in the MTA journals.
The issue I'm making is that even if the mentioned school doesn't teach a class
exclusively about TA...the topic is included in the course work of a class. Thus, the students are being exposed to technical analysis. I can still remember a friend's daughter calling me and asking me about "bollinger bands"...a chapter discussion in one of her classes only 5 years ago. Simply, I don't know any schools that teaches a
exclusively a class on TA but the above list do include schools that TA is part of class work (e.g. a class about Dow Theory that's sometimes taught at business schools).
The other important issue I made in a similar topic here at ET...all the mention schools have sponsors from top firms and those firms "do send" guest speakers to these schools...attended by students.
That's all off the discussion by the thread starter and
old news. The thread starter can easily ask any of those people at the links I posted to find out more information about their
career path (U.S. or European) to discover its more difficult these days than years ago to become a technical analyst.
I think most at some point did an "internship" at some firm and they eventually decided to go that route (techncial analyst) as a job. Tough jobs to get these days, hours are long and pay not that great unless you've won some kind of awards as an analyst at a prior firm.
Therefore, the appropriate college is part of the equation for someone wanting to choose "technical analyst" or "technical strategist" (often used in Europe) as a career at some firm.
By the way, when I was young and had the opportunity to visit some of those "so called" state of the art trading rooms at other universities...they were very impressive and a little shocking that a sponsoring firm would fork over that many millions of dollars to build.
I doubt they're doing things like that today.