| towers |
11-05-2014 07:19 PM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by Unregistered
(Post 51288)
Go to LSE! I am studying in the UK now. Almost everyone that I know who is averaging a first class have a summer internship with a BB front office firm. 20% of the econs student in LSE gets a first class. I am not sure what is the percentage for NTU but I can guarantee that it would be a lot harder. If you want to do investment banking, the choice is pretty clear IMO. Every year JP morgan front office in London has 40-50 places. In Singapore, probably 1-2. You might think that there is a larger pool of applicants in UK. However, IB only recruit from 5 schools in the UK, thus the actual pool is a lot smaller and thus it is relatively easier to get a top job than in Singapore.
Though it would really depend on you family finances. If they still can afford, I would think it is a worthwhile investment. Speak to your seniors, I believe they can give very good advice. Look at linkedin profiles of LSE Econs Singaporean students.
|
+1. Go to LSE. It really is a much more WOW factor on your cv than local. It is also much easier to do well in UK than Singapore, contrary to popular belief. The standard in UK is lower but for some strange reason it has a better reputation.
Take a student loan. Try applying to non govt scholarships or bursaries, like ngee ann kongsi or hokkien huay kuan. There might also be scholarships available in your GRC, go check on that. Then when you are in London, you can apply to uni-affiliated scholarships as well. I knew someone in my year who managed to get 3-4 scholarships. Not super high value each, but managed to recoup about half the cost. Then, you can also work part time. The course load is very light, I honestly had about 12-15 hours of classes a week in total, not including all the classes I skipped. I still got a first class.
Good luck with your decision.
|