Accounting and actuarial sciences are very different fields and its not easy to migrate from one to the other without graying your hair in the process...so choose carefully. In the US the university does not matter one bit. Only exams and experience.
<blockquote id="quote"><font size="1" face="Verdana, Tahoma, Arial" id="quote">quote<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"><i>Originally posted by Syed</i>
<br />Accounting and actuarial sciences are very different fields and its not easy to migrate from one to the other without graying your hair in the process...so choose carefully. In the US the university does not matter one bit. Only exams and experience.
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True
However, I guess Zaid was asking about the degree courses and not SOA, that is why he was asking about university. And according to my knowledge, university ranks counts a lot!
I am new to this forum wonna to know if any one is concern with the Actuarial divisions of Sidat haider , Akhtar & Hasan , state life or balla balla.I need to know about the market requirements and the eligibilities in the concerning firms.
Simultaneously with my University education I wonna to give Society's actuarial exams too.
Is there any body in the respective field or somewhat of touch with it.
yes sumaan is right, i am concerned about the degree courses. i am sill confused about them that what are differences between Bsc,Msc and complete actuarial sciences degree.
because some one told me that actuarial sciences is not a degree, it is just a certificate.
yes, but i still dont get it, tell me the differnece between complete actuarial science program and the one we get from a university, i mean what is the time difference
yes, but i am still not getting it. just tell me the difference between the complete actuarial science program and the one that is done by the university, for example time difference
<blockquote id="quote"><font size="1" face="Verdana, Tahoma, Arial" id="quote">quote<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"><i>Originally posted by zaid</i>
<br />just tell me the difference between the complete actuarial science program and the one that is done by the university
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To qualify as an actuary by most organisations, such as Institute and Society, you need to pass all their exams plus fulfill work experience requirements. The Institute, at the moment, has 3 years of work experience requirement. On average they say it takes 5-8 years to pass all those exams and able to get the relevant experience.
Some people also do bachelors or masters in actuarial sciences which enable them to gain some exemptions out of those exams set by the actuarial bodies (IOA/SOA).
So, to call yourself an actuary you need to pass all exams by the bodies and gain relevant work experience. If you manage to get exemptions through your BSc or MSc then you will qualify sooner.