My undergrad degree is in Applied Behavioral Sciences and I have worked is several fields. That to say, degrees are flexible. If you want to work in your field I’ll advise you seek higher education. Without a higher degree you may be facing entry level positions forever.
This website will answer your question in full.
http://www.psychologyinfo.com/students/careers.html
2007-03-26 16:28:04
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answer #1
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answered by heme 2
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There is not really much that you can do with an undergraduate degree in psychology other than be prepared to take a more advanced degree in Experimental Psychology, Clinical Psychology, or a masters degree in social work. When I was taking my master's degree, my advisor recommended that people interested in helping others consider becoming a psychiatric social worker with an MSW. It seems that many insurance companies and Employee Assistance Plans established by corporations do not want to pay for services given by people who have Ph.D.'s in clinical psychology.
One of the most interesting areas of psychology is the area that deals with Jury Consulting. I had the pleasure of taking a Legal Psychology course with Judith Platania, Ph. D., who had been a Jury Consultant for the Timothy McVey trial. Another famous Jury Consultant is JoEllan Dimetrius.
If you are interested in food, both taste and smell, the University of Pennsylvania has an excellent "chemical senses" program. Food companies pay for a lot of thr research. It can be a fun area of study.
2007-03-26 16:52:34
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answer #2
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answered by Mark 7
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You can go onto a MA degree in Psychology and PhD if you wish. There are so many different areas of psychology, there's bio-ethics, there's various types of counselling or therapy with kids or teenagers or adults. You can go into brain research like neurology or into linguistics , human development , social psychology.
You can go into social work or law , journalism , teaching , law enforcement, the military, foreign service, business, marketting and advertising.
Actually it's endless . Psychology is dealing with individuals and Sociology is dealing with group dynamics so psych and sociology pretty much play a part in just about every kind of career you can think of.
Are you thinking about a BSC in Psych or have you already rec'd one?
2007-03-26 16:25:19
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Neither are classes certainly, they're tiers. A B.A. degree with a substantial in Psychology is a great liberal arts degree that prepares you for a sort of careers. the particular path you're taking is as much as you. some concepts require a regularly occurring liberal arts college degree; others enable extra utilization of the particular know-how won as a psychology substantial. on the different hand, a B.S. in Psychology is designed to offer a documents base of present day approaches, content fabric factors, and theories. So in truth, its extra technology based. So it purely relies upon on you and what you're interested in pursuing interior the sphere of psychology that would desire to verify the probabilities you're able to have. some factors have a a techniques better call for and %, whilst others are over populated and jobs at the instant are not in severe call for. do purely your analyze and good success with in spite of path you %.
2016-10-20 12:45:09
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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Statistical psychology is a rudimentary science. People like Arthur Jensen actually gather data and try to find theories that explain them.
But clinical psychology is BS, where the clinical psychologist invents a new pet theory and tries to justify it with gobbledegook. If you get a Ph.D. in clinical psychology, you can get somebody to pay you to BS.
And lawyers trying to prosecute or defend somebody in court will solict your "expert" testimony and pay you well for your time, provided that what you say supports his cause. Lots of people have been convicted or aquitted mostly because a clinical psychologist's BS "sounded good" to ignorant jurors.
Of course, you can double or triple your consultant income by being flexible enough to hold several mutually conflicting theories, all justified by your expert BS, with you selecting whichever theory is the most convenient to whomever is hiring you.
Every clinical psychologist, so far as I know, especially marriage counsellors, is sort of a gun for hire - a gun loaded with BS, which some fool-in-authority is disposed to take seriously, which usually results either in a harm being inflicted on society in general or in an injustice being imposed on someone in particular.
2007-03-26 16:28:46
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Clinical psychology (with a high GPA, like 3.7 & up)
Educational counseling (a GPA of 3.0 should be good enough)
Social work (min. GPA 2.8 )
It really depends on the requirements of the school you are applying for.
I'm deciding what to do for myself....good luck.
2007-03-26 16:19:05
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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WELL, you could help people with their mental problems, you should be able to obtain a higher degree, like an MS or PHD. and i certainly agree with the other answers suggesting that having a really good grade point average will increase your probability of success. interestingly enough, you could also land a stable and fairly rewarding government job, i.e. state or federal government job.
2007-03-26 16:49:42
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Why not follow tradition & continue taking money from people who are never going to benefit from your services, yet their weekly checks will keep you safe in a high security loft atmosphere in the center of the Downtown Arts District! LOL!
2007-03-26 16:27:33
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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Go work in a fast food place
2007-03-27 13:56:17
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answer #9
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answered by L J 4
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yeah! you could be human resources management manager or officer.,any business or stablishments needs psyco.
2007-03-26 16:20:47
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answer #10
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answered by 0330em@jd 4
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