The Path to Heaven or Hell

Here is another interesting article: a case study


USING A FINANCIAL TRADING ROOM TO FACILITATE AN INTERDISCIPLINARY, LEARNER-CENTERED PARADIGM: ONE SCHOOL’S EXPERIENCE


http://www.tsu.edu/pdffiles/Southwestern Business Journal/SBAJ-sp2009-Paper4.pdf



Individuals responding to questions about such facilities indicated that the immediacy of stock and global news information adds realism to the classroom. Through team-based and individual study, students gain a greater understanding of how financial markets respond to new information. As students experience the impact of global currency fluctuations, variances in governmental policy, and corporate and individual decision-making, the sense of a ―global economy‖ expands beyond that of a textbook discussion to one that is more attuned with the way 21st century students learn. These perceptions lead one to anticipate the following propostion:


Proposition 1. Learner-centered instruction in technology enhanced financial laboratories improves student skills and retention of dynamic content knowledge.

Propostition 2. Learner-centered instruction in technology enhanced financial laboratories improves faculty and student interaction and student learning.

Propostion 3. The accuracy and immediacy of data in a technology enhanced financial laboratories improves opportunities for faculty research.

Proposition 4. Learner-centered instruction in technology enhanced financial laboratories improves supports interdisciplinary collaborations.

Propostition 5. Using the FTR would assists faculty in finance, economics, and accounting in the process of developing curricula to effectively assess student learning


Proposition 6. Learner-centered instruction in technology enhanced financial laboratories improves students understanding and application of financial concepts to real-world businesses.

Proposition 7. Exposure to and classroom instruction in the technology enhanced financial laboratories improves students’ overall learning and access to internship and permanent placement opportunities.

Proposition 8. Student engagement in projects requiring the use of the FTR will enhance soft-skill development.


CONCLUSION
The experiences associated with developing and implementing the FTR have been rewarding. Anticipated positive outcomes have been realized across all of the areas selected for study. Program expansion, however, to the broader campus and in the community remains a significant work-in-progress. This paper has not discussed the cost of implementation, and it should be noted that to build a facility such as this generally requires a significant initial capital outlay to develop the FTR and continuing annual expenses for product licensing. The primary determinant of cost is related to the size of the FTR and the range of financial products selected for use by students and faculty.

The establishment of the Young Investors Club was the result of grass-root student action based on the availability of the FTR. This unexpected outcome draws over 30 students to the FTR weekly for guest speaker presentations and informal learning opportunities. The use of the facility by secondary schools was also more a hope than an expectation. When it was realized, all parties were pleased. Today, more than 1,000 students participate in activities in the FTR annually and we anticipate increasing use. The results of our experiences suggest that the learner-center paradigm works effectively in the trading room environment and we strongly recommend that others consider this as a means of increasing student learning.








Subscribing to 3rd party educational vendors/signal providers will not make u a successful trader. It will just get u dumber.
 
All of these Ivy League graduates are still crunching numbers for Papa bear as expensive calculators.

You can slather makeup on a donkey and have it still look like an ass.
 
Quote from emg:

Keep in mind. While universities are building and expanding their Trading Room laboratory, HFT will continue to grow at a substantial rate. Quant trader/HFT Traders will be in high demand.

Small traders lose, they just lose.

The future is HFT! All funds are doing HFT now, small traders are dead minced meat for the HFT machines.

Small traders stand no chance.

Get an education, get an MBA.

Higher education is the key.
 
What unique about the university trading room lab is open to all departments (school of agriculture, school of math, school of engineer, school of business, etc) If one wants to learn how to trade grain futures or grain spread futures, he/she can get help from the school of agriculture professors and both will do a research in the lab.


Higher Education will allow u to be able to create your own trading system with the help from many professors.


Higher Education!




Keep in mind, MIT BlackJack team was formed both by professors with different background and students
 
Here is another university in New York offers trading room:

Hofstra University


In January 2005, the Zarb School took a major step toward establishing a state-of-the-art trading room, named after alumni member Martin B. Greenberg, by installing 34 Bloomberg terminals. The Martin B. Greenberg Trading Room is a technology-enhanced academic trading room equipped with industry-standard, dual-panel terminals and audio-visual displays. In this Center, faculty and students can access the same data, analytics, and software used by financial professionals to make investment, trading and financial decisions.

Business students can also participate in scholarly activities like The Merrill Lynch Center. This center was enacted to promote and facilitate faculty and student study in the field of international financial services and markets, and to communicate knowledge and information in this field. The Center will seek to accomplish this through (a) the interaction of academics and professionals; and (b) an interdisciplinary approach to the study of the Center's areas of interest. Other events include the Frank G. Zarb School of Business Executive Speaker Series where numerous business professionals from various, diverse fields are invited to the school to lecture, take part in a question and answer session and share their knowledge/experiences in their area of expertise.


http://www.hofstra.edu/academics/Colleges/Zarb/tradrm/tradrm_about.html


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The real EDUCATION
 
Quote from riskaddict:

Glad you think highly of Rugters! I finished up with a 3.1 but I blame it on not being able to understand a word half of the &^%$## professors said. Learn to speak English before you get paid to teach. God those were great times... I should have married that pharmacology major I was banging. How did I mess that up??

When I graduated I didn't apply anywhere because frankly the idea of waking up and being around a bunch of the worst kinds of human beings I could imagine didn't appeal to me. I don't remember anyone ever really talking about wanting to be a trader they all wanted to be IB's or analysts. Maybe because I was econ and traders are computer and engineering geeks. I have played golf a few times with a guy that works at SIG as an energy trader and what he must know and keep track of is fing mind boggling. He is a real trader performing a service as an intermediary not really playing the odds like how at least I think of trading or prop trading. Anyways... just rambling I have no idea what this thread is about but life is what you make of it.


Rutgers Trading Room:

The new pavilion of the Business School features a new RBS trading room and three primary lecture halls with a seating capacity of 80-100



http://whereru.rutgers.edu/gigapans/245/Trading-Room
 
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