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Would someone please give me an overview?

2006-09-03 02:42:22 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Social Science Psychology

4 answers

Here's an overview of education and training.
You have 4 years of undergraduate college. After graduation, you should get some real experience before heading onto grad school. It will prepare you in more ways than one. While you are working, begin researching graduate schools. Look at everything from the program, to costs, to the internship placement rate. Then apply to a program, call for questions and go on an interview.
When you are accepted, your first year will consist of only classes. Many schools suggest that you only focus on education and not work part-time (although I worked full-time and it was a nightmare). You will take the basic courses your first year. Before you head to your second year, consider getting your masters. Some grad schools allow you to get a terminal master's degree. Do it. Some clinical internships will only consider you if you have a master's. The second year, you will have a lighter load of classes, but will take your first practicum. This is basically a 9 month internship doing either therapy or testing. Third year, you will take a second practicum and begin studying for your comprehensive exam and writing a dissertation proposal. In the spring/summer of your third year, you will take your comprehensive exam (or comps) to assess and apply everything you learned in the past 3 years. If you pass, during your fourth year, you will start looking for clinical internships. This is a nationwide search and highly competitive. 400 students will not have an internship this year. Basically, you will apply to about 15 sites, get interviews at about 6 or 7 and then have to find the money to fly all over the country to go on interviews. You interview from November to February. End of February, on a Friday, you find out if you got an internship. You won't know where until the following Monday. If you did not place, that Monday, appic and the training directors list all the internship sites that have extra slots and you have mere minutes to prepare your application and e-mail it to the training directors (it goes very quickly). This year, over 700 students did not match and only 300 slots remained. You then have to wait and wait and wait to see if any training directors call you for an interview (hopefully, you will never get to this point).
If you get an internship, you then have to prepare for moving (if necessary). Your fifth year, you will be at an internship for 12 months, 40 hours a week, while also completing your dissertation. After you complete this internship AND your dissertation, you will graduate with a PsyD or PhD. You then have 2 choices: you can try to find a place that will let you work as an unlicensed psychologist while providing supervision or you can get a postdoc. After practicing for awhile under a licensed psychologist, you can then apply to take your licensure exam (the EPPP). The number of hours of experience required depends on your state. If you pass your EPPP, you are then technically a clinical psychologist.

2006-09-04 04:02:50 · answer #1 · answered by psychgrad 7 · 0 0

psychology is one of the best fields in education I am a major in political philosophy which is closely related to psychology. Basically you learn why people act the way they do through cause and effect. You will also study mental illness which is an eye opener for those unpredictable acts by humans have fun

2006-09-03 02:59:23 · answer #2 · answered by Ben V 2 · 0 0

I'm a high school dropout with a few semester hours in nite school to include sociology & psychology.
I wouldn't want to be a doctor with sick people coming to me all day.
I wouldn't want to be a policeman with criminals involved in my daily routine.
I wouldn't want to go into psychology to deal with the minds of twisted individuals either.
Glad I'm a retired taxidriver from Hawa!! with an 'overview' equal to none!

2006-09-03 02:55:08 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Well, if you like getting "dumped on" all day-that's pretty much basically what it's about.

You will also be called in court cases to testify either for or against someone. You will also have to write lengthy summations on a person's mental condition for whatever reason.

If you like technical stuff, go for it !

2006-09-03 06:04:16 · answer #4 · answered by Big Bear 7 · 0 0

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