What is the fastest time you attained your diploma?

Hey guys,

Just interested to see what kind of times some of you achieved your diploma or anything similar in.

A lot of the correspondence online diplomas these days are open book/multichoice exams. I was talking to a guy the other day who said he got his financial planning diploma in 2 months while working fulltime and raising 3 kids.

Anyone got any similar stories?
 
you get what you pay. You can buy a diploma and have it sent to your inbox right after they processed your credit card.



Hey guys,

Just interested to see what kind of times some of you achieved your diploma or anything similar in.

A lot of the correspondence online diplomas these days are open book/multichoice exams. I was talking to a guy the other day who said he got his financial planning diploma in 2 months while working fulltime and raising 3 kids.

Anyone got any similar stories?
 
It depends what kind of degree you are talking about. While in school I had my first kid, worked full time, and will be finishing up my finance degree next semester. It will take me 5 years from when I started. I could have done it faster but had lots of scheduling issues. They only offered a couple night classes per semester that I needed so that really slowed down the process.
 
I completed a post-master executive program in finance & control in 2,5 years, for which the nominal duration was 3 years, while working full-time in a senior management position, commuting 2-3 hours a day and going through a divorce. Studied four evenings a week and every sunday, looked like a total zombie according to friends.
One year after graduation I quit and took up trading.
 
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Wow that sounds like a valuable degree. "Post master executive" and "senior management position" ...and then unemployed day trader.

But then we are not allowed to call someone a "secretary" anymore ...it is a "senior executive assistant" . So much bullshit...so few truths.

I completed a post-master executive program in finance & control in 2,5 years, for which the nominal duration was 3 years, while working full-time in a senior management position, commuting 2-3 hours a day and going through a divorce. Studied four evenings a week and every sunday, looked like a total zombie according to friends.
One year after graduation I quit and took up trading.
 
Wow that sounds like a valuable degree. "Post master executive" and "senior management position" ...and then unemployed day trader.

But then we are not allowed to call someone a "secretary" anymore ...it is a "senior executive assistant" . So much bullshit...so few truths.

http://www.eur.nl/esaa/post_master_...ZG5l0_R02tCAjjs0k2HA2xaf-2HbAw3qWYaApee8P8HAQ

http://brochures.esaa.nl/04_Registercontroller/index.html

So much for BS. And what is your educational background?
 
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Wow that sounds like a valuable degree. "Post master executive" and "senior management position" ...and then unemployed day trader.

But then we are not allowed to call someone a "secretary" anymore ...it is a "senior executive assistant" . So much bullshit...so few truths.
Anyway, thanks for the reminder not to divulge anything personal or professional on a public message board.
 
No problem to divulge something as long as you can deal with others commenting on it.

I studied comp finance at CMU

Anyway, thanks for the reminder not to divulge anything personal or professional on a public message board.
 
No problem to divulge something as long as you can deal with others commenting on it.

I studied comp finance at CMU
Comments are fine, implying someone is a liar or a fraud not.
 
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you wrote: "I completed a post-master executive program in finance & control in 2,5 years, for which the nominal duration was 3 years, while working full-time in a senior management position, commuting 2-3 hours a day and going through a divorce. Studied four evenings a week and every sunday, looked like a total zombie according to friends.
One year after graduation I quit and took up trading."

Is that what normal people do? One is in a "senior management position" (your wording), then joins a "post-master executive program" (any more superlatives?), and then you waste the tens if not hundreds of thousands and become a day trader? Am I seeing bullshit where there is not? Then I sincerely apologize...but comments such as yours explain everything I need to know to understand why so many lose in trading. Any an all coherence, logic, determination is missing/lacking.

There's a difference between insults and comments.
 
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