As is pretty obvious from my posts, I think the CFA program is very valuable and I think there’s lots of great stuff to learn. But if any of my kids was studying for their CFA exams while in college, I would be mightily ticked.
When I was in college I had a professor who used to give an introductory lecture in Political Science 101 in which he said that in this class we wouldn’t study something as narrowly defined as political science but we would include history, geography, philosophy, sociology, psychology and whatever else he could think of. The reason is that college isn’t about exploring narrowly defined topics, but about being inducted into The Conversation of Man.
For 5000 or 5,000,000 years, people have been trying to understand their universe, the nature of God and themselves, and create beauty. Nearly all the pearls from the best mind’s search are taught in at least one college course. You can learn about DNA, quantum mechanics, relativity, Michaelangelo, Thomas Aquinas, calculus, etc, etc. Learn enough of these things and you can listen to the Conversation. Learn even more and you can participate.
Not much on the CFA exams is part of the Conversation. Some econ. A little math. I would much, much rather hire someone who spent his time in college reading Kierkagaard than passing the CFA exams. Someone gave you this beautiful opportunity to grab the very best that thousands of years of humanity has to offer and instead you chose a professional certification exam… What other opportunities are you going to miss and what are they going to cost me?