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The Department of Psychology offers two degrees at
the undergraduate level, the Bachelor of Arts and the Bachelor of Science in Psychology. The program
of study that culminates in a B.A. degree provides the student
with experience and training necessary to pursue post-baccalaureate education
in psychology and other professional areas or to secure employment immediately
following completion of the undergraduate degree, and with the broad education
essential to the formation of a well-rounded, informed individual. The
B.S. degree in Psychology is designed to provide additional training and experience
in research to those students who want greater mastery in basic sciences
and methodology. The B.S. degree program is most appropriate for those
students who want to significantly enhance their competitive standing
for admission to doctoral training in psychology - although it should
be noted that the majority of our B.A. degree students have been highly
successful in achieving graduate school acceptance as well. Any student
who meets the requirements of the College of Arts and Sciences may pursue
the B.A. degree in Psychology; the B.S. degree program requires an application
and a faculty sponsor.
Psychologists assume many different roles; for example,
they work as teachers, researchers, service providers, administrators,
and consultants. Because psychologists
perform such diverse tasks, they work in many different settings: colleges
and universities, elementary and secondary schools, private practices,
hospitals, human service agencies, business and industry, and government.
Recent national reports on the employment outlook
predict that individuals with degrees in psychology will be in high demand.
However, the demand rate will depend on the type of degree that the person
has. For doctoral-level psychologists, employment opportunities have flourished
during the past decade. Some of the positions that Ph.D.'s in Psychology
fill are professors, therapists, clinical research psychologists, experimental
researchers, and those who work in many business and industrial settings.
People with a master's degree in psychology work in a variety of settings,
including schools, business and industry, mental health care centers,
and community colleges. Graduate who do not pursue the Ph.D. after receiving
their master's often obtain jobs in teaching or research settings, or
service with some limitations that exist without the doctoral degree.
Teachers at the master's level usually work in community colleges rather
than four-year colleges and universities.
Although a bachelor's degree in psychology will not
prepare you to provide services as a professional independent psychologist,
an undergraduate student can be very successful in the job market by carefully
planning a major in psychology with well-selected supporting coursework
from a variety of areas such as computing, statistics, communications,
business, engineering, education, or various sciences or mathematics.
The following are just some of the fields that graduates
with bachelor's degrees in psychology have entered: administration and
management, business and industry, casework, child care, employment interviewing,
health services, marketing and public relations, personnel, probation
and parole, psychiatric assisting, research or laboratory assisting, sales,
teaching, and technical writing. Students pursuing the bachelor's degree
as a terminal degree are encouraged to seek academic counseling on an
intensive level with a faculty advisor, and to consult closely with the
University's job placement service.
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