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#1
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I am looking for some superstar exam takers for the AFL draft which is this Friday. If you have the name (& exam #) of a superstar exam taker (e.g. yourself, if you are confident that you'll pass) that you wouldn't mind distributing, please let me know.
Concept: The concept of an actuarial fantasy league is of a similar nature with fantasy football or rotisserie baseball. You and your office mates draft a roster of actuarial students and your team's success is determined by how those students perform on the actuarial exams. Teams: 1. Teams shall consist of 9 players. 2. You must have someone sitting for each of exams being taken 3. You can also have 3 "Flex" players who can sit for any exams. 4. Players are mutually exclusive within a league. No one player can be owned by 2 people participating in the same league. 5. Owners within the league can be players and owned by other owners within the league. Draft: 1. Order of the draft to be determined at the league's discretion. *note* if your league has 10 or fewer owners a really actuarially appropriate way to assign draft order is to place the names in order, pick a random high digit of pi, and assign each person the next unique digit. 2. The initial draft should be carried out in a top to bottom--bottom to top format 3. Subsequent drafts should be bottom to top for each round 4. The draft should take place between 2 and 3 weeks before the first exam of the season. Rosters: 1. After each round of exams, an owner may protect up to 4 members of their team in lieu of using the last 4 picks in the draft. If 2 or more of those are taking the same exam, the others must be "Flex" players. These protected players must be announced 1 week before the draft. 2. Trades are allowed in the period between the exams and the next draft. Scoring: 1. You only get points for players who pass their exam. You get 11 points for exam 1, 12 for exam 2, etc. 2. If one of your players passes 2 exams in 1 sitting, you get a 5 point bonus. "the FRANCE" 3. If you have players pass exams 1, 2, 3, and 4 you get a 5 point bonus. "the Multiple Choice" 4. If you have players pass exams 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 or 6, you get another 5 point bonus. "the ASA" Winning: 1. After each round of exams, you will have both a round winner and an overall leader 2. The overall leader standings should be based on the previous 2 exams and present exam. |
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#2
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What a completely interesting (though nutty) idea you have there, sock_man. Though I don't know who you'll find with the balls to taut themselves as a "sure-pass" on a public forum 3 weeks before the test. Imagine the ribbing if they got a 5.
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#3
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I agree it's a nutty idea. We're in our 2nd season (sitting) and I need to improve from last sitting.
Networking is key. Beyond that, you need to rely on the pass lists on the SOA website. About 6 years ago, a bunch of friends and I started a college football fantasy league where you choose from a set of teams (SEC, ACC,. & Big East), but with the AFL the possibilities are endless!!! |
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#4
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...while I think I will pass, I will not be playing as a contestant or a AFL player.
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#5
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C'mon macroman,
Join a winning team!!! =) I understand not wanting your name in our fantasy league, even though it is just for fun. The funny thing is that I only knew one my "players" last time. I got all the rest from the pass lists on the SOA website. |
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#6
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Perhaps you'll get a better response if you leave your e-mail address instead of asking people to post their names.
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#7
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#8
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Thanks Toonces for the suggestion!!
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#9
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Wow! The AFL! What a way to take some stress off of the exam process (or really add to the stress if you are one of the chosen to pass). I am not willing to give my name as a definite pass this time, but I will give you 2 names that I feel confident will pass (I hope these people don't check this forum). The first I feel really confident about is sitting for Course 4. I actually have a bet with someone he will pass this time. His name is Phillip Simms (not to be confused with the quarterback). The second I am not as sure about because she did not sit last time, but she started studying for a long time ago for Course 6. She also has a lot of motivation to pass as this will make her an ASA. Her name is Sondra Morse. Please understand I do not guarantee these people will pass. Please do not come looking for me if they don't. Good luck to you in your AFL.
P.S. If I wanted to start on of these AFL's where I work, what would I need to do? How many AFL's are there? |
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#10
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are you guys kidding me?? Instead of starting an AFL team and digging through old pass lists to see who passed, wouldn't it be better to study? First, I don't even know that many actuaries. Second, after reading this posting, I'm ashamed to be an actuary. I guess all those rumors of us being dorks are completely true, as demonstrated by this great idea.
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