Goal: Today's goal is to turn Day 10–11 concepts into automatic exam‑style problem solving across all the testing aspects covered so far, like mean, variance, CI, p‑value/critical value, Type I/II, etc.
Make it a day for mixed concept drill
Make a single
sheet that forces you to recall definitions and decision rules
- From Day 10: null vs alternative, one‑ vs two‑tailed, significance level, Type I and II errors, decision rule, test statistic idea.
- From Day 11: CI construction, when to use z vs t, single mean test, single variance test, p‑value vs critical value, power
- Understand the Big Data concepts, the various aspects of Fintech that are relevant for gathering financial data, be able to describe Big Data, Machine Learning and AI and their application in investm,ent decisions. These are relatively newer topics and are relevant in today's context
Questions
Do a set of 20–30 questions that
mix:
- Constructing CIs (mostly 95%, with a
few 90%/99%).
- Testing hypotheses about a single
mean (both one‑ and two‑tailed).
- Using both critical value and p‑value
approaches.
- Big Data
For each
question, explicitly answer:
- What are H₀ and H₁?
- What distribution (z or t) and why?
- Test statistic value.
- Decision by p‑value, decision by critical value.
- If applicable, check: does the CI
include the hypothesized value?
Variance Tests + Power Interpretation
- Correct df, correct tail(s), and reading chi‑square critical values.
- How increasing sample size affects power.
- How changing α changes Type I vs Type II trade‑off.
End Day 12 Quant session with
a mini Quant block (20–25 questions) just on testing/CI:
- Time yourself at ~1.5 min/question.
- Then review and mark each as:
“Concept error”, “Formula error”, or “Careless”.
- Anything that is a concept or
formula error becomes priority for Day 13.
Daily Ethics
block: 30–45 min
Try this pattern
each day:
- 10–15 min reading / notes
- Pick one small chunk: one Standard
(e.g., Standard II(A)–Material Nonpublic Information) or a short section
of GIPS.
- Make 2–3 bullet notes in your own
words: “What is prohibited? What is allowed?”
- 15–20 min questions
- Do 8–12 vignette‑style or
stand‑alone Ethics questions from your Q‑bank or CFAI practice.
- Aim for careful reading, not speed.
Ethics is about nuance and wording.