I can see the point in a detailed knowledge of statistics, which is full of traps for the unwary, especially when dealing with large and often fairly random datasets. It's not about logic, unlike coding, it's way more complicated than breaking problems into sequential stages.
But that said I have to agree with the others. By all means get a degree but do it offline. Outside HMG, nobody really cares about degrees, only experience and quantifiable success. Also the tax rules mean it's not claimable anyway - at its simplest, you can only build on knowledge you already have, not acquire new stuff. If you're already in data science then clearly you have the skills already.
But that said I have to agree with the others. By all means get a degree but do it offline. Outside HMG, nobody really cares about degrees, only experience and quantifiable success. Also the tax rules mean it's not claimable anyway - at its simplest, you can only build on knowledge you already have, not acquire new stuff. If you're already in data science then clearly you have the skills already.
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